USRN Contract Terms Explained: What to Check Before Signing

This guide is our complete walkthrough of USRN contract terms, written from 16 years of healthcare staffing experience and placing 300+ Filipino nurses in U.S. skilled nursing facilities under the Grandison Gold Standard.

Filipino nurse signing a USRN contract
Nurses who signed up with Grandison USRN Contract Terms

What Every Filipino Nurse Should Look For Before Signing a USRN Contract?

A USRN contract is the legal agreement between you — an internationally educated Registered Nurse — and the U.S. employer or recruitment agency sponsoring your move to the United States. It defines your salary, working hours, contract length, visa sponsorship, and dozens of other terms that will shape your life in the U.S. for the next two to three years.

Before you sign, you need to understand what’s in it — and just as importantly, what should not be in it.

At a glance:

  • Most USRN contracts run 24 to 36 months
  • Typical placement is in U.S. skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), rehabilitation centers, hospitals, or long-term care
  • Visa sponsorship is usually EB-3 (immigrant visa for skilled workers)
  • AAIHR’s Code of Ethics prohibits document withholding, punitive breach fees, and contract switching
  • Any contract that violates those principles is one to walk away from

Why This Contract Matters More Than You Think

The contract you sign today will govern your life in the United States for years.

Get it right, and it becomes the foundation of your American Dream — a stable career, fair pay, a clear path to permanent residency, and the chance to bring your family to join you.

Get it wrong, and the consequences can be severe: hidden deductions, sudden reassignments, punitive breach fees, and in the worst cases, outright abandonment by your sponsoring agency once you arrive in the U.S.

We at Grandison have seen both sides. Many of the Filipino nurses thriving with us today joined us only after being abandoned by other agencies — sometimes during visa retrogression.

This guide exists so that does not happen to you.

PT Erika's arrival in the United States

The 10 Essential Components of a USRN Contract​

Every USRN contract should clearly define each of the following. If any are missing, vague, or worded ambiguously, treat that as a signal to ask more questions before signing.

1. Contract Duration

What it is: The length of time you are contractually committed to your employer or agency.

Standard range: 24 to 36 months (2–3 years).

What to look for: A clearly stated start and end date, or a clear formula for when the contract clock starts (typically the day you begin work in the U.S., not the day you sign).

Red flag: Any duration longer than the signed contract without explicit justification, or contracts that allow the agency to extend the term unilaterally.

2. Compensation and Pay Structure

What it is: Your hourly rate plus all forms of supplemental pay.

What to look for:

  • A specific hourly rate (not a range, not “competitive”)
  • Overtime pay structure (usually 1.5x base rate after 40 hours per week)
  • Shift differentials for evening, night, or weekend shifts
  • Holiday pay
  • A clear statement that the rate matches the prevailing wage for your state and role — this is a federal requirement for EB-3 visa sponsorship

Red flag: Vague language like “compensation to be determined upon arrival” or “in accordance with company policy.” Your rate must be specific and in writing before you sign.

3. Benefits

What it is: Non-wage compensation — health insurance, paid time off, incentives, and more.

What to look for:

  • Health insurance with a clearly stated start date (ideally day one of employment)
  • Paid time off (PTO) accrual rate
  • Disability and life insurance if offered

Red flag: Benefits that only begin after an extended probationary period (3+ months), or benefits described in language so vague you can’t actually price them.

4. Visa Sponsorship Terms

What it is: Which visa your employer is sponsoring and who is responsible for what.

What to look for:

  • The specific visa category — for most Filipino nurses, this is EB-3
  • Confirmation that the employer pays all employer-required visa fees (this is a U.S. Department of Labor requirement, not optional)
  • A clear statement of what happens if there is a visa retrogression delay (when employment-based visa demand exceeds available quotas)
  • Whether the agency commits to continued communication and support during any delay

Red flag: Any contract that asks you to pay employer-side visa fees, or that goes silent on what happens during retrogression. Many Filipino nurses have been abandoned by agencies during retrogression — your contract should specifically protect against that.

Learn more about how Grandison supports nurses through visa retrogression →

5. Work Location and Facility Assignment

What it is: Where, exactly, you will work in the United States. Though note that for most staffing agencies, exact location and facility assignment happens at the later part before departure for USA as visa retrogression can affect job orders and placements after years of waiting for your arrival in the USA.

What to look for:

  • The specific facility (or short list of facilities) where you’ll be placed
  • The city and state of placement
  • The type of facility — skilled nursing facility, hospital, rehab center, home health
  • Whether your placement is direct-hire with one employer or staffing-model with a network

Red flag: Contracts that give the agency unilateral, unlimited reassignment rights to anywhere in the country at any time.

Note: a limited and protective reassignment provision is actually a benefit, not a risk. The difference is whether reassignment exists to protect you (from a failing facility) or to give the agency power over you.

This is where Grandison’s Secure Placement Model is structurally different. As our Operations Director, Shmuel Carmen, explains it:

Read the full breakdown of our transparent USRN contracts →

6. Training and Onboarding Costs

What it is: Who pays for your pre-deployment training, certifications, and orientation.

What to look for:

  • Who covers NCLEX preparation or reimbursement costs
  • Who covers clinical training (geriatric, ICU, telemetry, etc.)
  • Who covers English Exam requirements, exam fee and visa screen processing
  • Whether any of these costs become recoverable by the employer if you breach the contract

Red flag: You pay every cost upfront with no reimbursement structure, or training costs become disproportionately punitive if you ever need to exit the contract.

See how Grandison’s geriatric and cultural training program prepares nurses for U.S. roles →

7. Relocation Assistance

What it is: Support to physically move you from the Philippines to the United States.

What to look for:

  • Flight from the Philippines to the U.S. — fully paid or partially reimbursed
  • Temporary housing assistance (typically 30 days after arrival)
  • Settlement allowance for initial U.S. expenses if offered
  • Pick up from Airport to Staffing House upon arrival in the U.S.
  • Help opening a U.S. bank account, obtaining a Social Security number, and securing a U.S. driver’s license

Red flag: No relocation support at all, or basic support that’s structured as a personal loan you repay over your contract.

8. Breach Fees (Liquidated Damages)

What it is: The amount you would owe if you ended the contract early.

This is the most misunderstood part of a USRN contract.

Breach fees are normal. Ethical agencies invest tens of thousands of dollars in your training, visa sponsorship, and relocation. Recovering some of that cost if you leave early is reasonable and legal.

What an ethical breach fee looks like:

  • A reasonable, capped amount
  • Pursued in good faith (per AAIHR Code of Ethics)
  • Never used as a punitive tool to trap you

Red flag: Breach fees that increase over time, do not decline as you complete service, are vastly disproportionate to the agency’s actual investment, or are paired with threats of immigration enforcement.

9. Termination Clauses

What it is: The conditions under which your employer (or you) can end the contract.

What to look for:

  • The specific reasons for which your employer can terminate you
  • The notice required from either side
  • What happens to your visa status upon termination (this is critical)
  • Any severance or transition support

Red flag: “At-will” termination with no defined cause, or contracts where termination immediately voids your visa with no transition support.

10. Document Retention

What it is: Who holds your personal documents — passport, visa, green card, licensure records.

This one is non-negotiable. Under the AAIHR Code of Ethics, no agency or employer may withhold your passport, green card, certifications, permits, visas, or any other official documents for any coercive purpose.

Custody must be transferred to you as soon as the certification and immigration process reasonably allows.

Red flag: Any contract clause that allows the agency to hold your personal documents. Walk away from any contract that contains this provision, regardless of how it’s worded.

mistakes when applying for nursing jobs in the USA

5 Red Flags That Should Make You Walk Away

If your contract contains any of the following, do not sign. Find another agency.

  1. Document withholding — any clause that lets the agency hold your passport, green card, or licensure documents
  2. Punitive breach fees that don’t decline as you complete service, or that are paired with threats of immigration enforcement
  3. Vague compensation“rate to be determined,” “in accordance with company policy,” or no specific hourly rate at all
  4. No reassignment safety net combined with no abandonment protection — if your facility fails, you’re on your own
  5. Mandatory non-compete clauses that prevent you from working in U.S. healthcare for years after your contract ends

What an Ethical USRN Contract Looks Like

The clearest way to understand a good contract is to see one in action.

Every contract we issue under the Grandison Gold Standard meets the following standard:

  • Transparent contract terms in plain language — no hidden clauses, no surprises
  • No recruitment fees that violate AAIHR standards
  • No contract switching
  • Continuous support throughout the process — including during visa retrogression
  • Protection against employer-related risks through our Secure Placement Model
  • Fair and equal opportunities regardless of background, gender, or marital status

For the full picture of how we operate ethically — including dispute resolution, document custody, and compliance with U.S. labor law — see our companion guide on legal transparency in nursing contracts.

Read more on Grandison’s record in ethical recruitment →

See the 50 Grandison nurses who completed their USRN contracts →

6 Questions to Ask Before You Sign Any USRN Contract

Before you sign, get clear written answers to these six questions. Any reputable agency will answer all six without hesitation.

  1. Can I take a copy of this contract and consult my own legal counsel before signing? (Answer should be yes, always.)
  2. What is your reassignment policy if my facility cannot follow through on placement? (Answer should be specific.)
  3. What happens if there is a visa retrogression delay? (Answer should include continued support and communication.)
  4. Who will be my dedicated point of contact in the U.S. after I arrive? (There should be a named role or person.)
  5. Are you a member of AAIHR or another recognized industry body? (Membership is a meaningful trust signal.)

If an agency cannot or will not answer these questions clearly, that itself is the answer.

PT Erika's successful US Journey
Transparent USRN contract under the Grandison Gold Standard

What Happens After You Sign

A typical USRN journey under an ethical, well-structured contract follows this path:

  1. Contract signing 
  2. English Exam preparation and visa screen processing (with agency support)
  3. Pre-deployment training — geriatric clinical training plus cultural orientation
  4. Visa processing (EB-3 or applicable category)
  5. Pre-departure briefing and travel arrangements
  6. Arrival in the U.S. with airport pickup, temporary housing, and onboarding
  7. Facility orientation and start of work
  8. Continuous support throughout your contract — from your assigned point of contact in the U.S.
  9. Contract completion and pathway to permanent residency

The right contract is the document that makes every one of those steps predictable.

Your Contract Is Your Foundation

A USRN contract is more than paperwork.

It is the foundation of your American Dream. It is the document that determines whether you arrive in the U.S. protected and prepared, or exposed and alone.

We at Grandison have spent 16 years building a contract framework that protects the people who trust us with their futures.

If you are reviewing a USRN contract right now — from any agency — we hope this guide helps you sign the right one.

And if you would like us to walk you through what a Grandison contract looks like, we are always available to answer questions.

Nurses who trusted and signed their USRN contract with Grandison are now in the USA

Get to know how Grandison can help you with your American Dream.

Nurses who recently finished their nursing contract in the U.S. with Grandison

We are happy to announce recent nurses who have completed their contract with Grandison! This shows our commitment to our employees and also our employees trust with the Grandison Nursing program.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a USRN contract?

A USRN contract is the legal agreement between an internationally educated Registered Nurse and the U.S. employer or recruitment agency sponsoring their move to the United States. It defines salary, working hours, contract duration, visa sponsorship, breach fees, benefits, relocation support, and termination conditions. Most USRN contracts run 24 to 36 months and involve EB-3 visa sponsorship for placement in U.S. skilled nursing facilities or hospitals.

How long is a typical USRN contract?

A typical USRN contract runs 24 to 36 months — two to three years from the start of U.S. employment. Anything longer than three years without explicit justification should prompt closer review, and the contract should clearly state when the duration clock begins (usually your first day of work in the U.S., not the day you sign).

Can my recruitment agency hold my passport or green card?

No. Under the AAIHR Code of Ethics, no recruitment agency or employer may withhold a healthcare professional's passport, green card, certifications, permits, visas, or any other official documents for any coercive purpose. Custody of these documents must be transferred to you as soon as the certification and immigration process reasonably allows. Any contract clause that allows document withholding is unethical — walk away from it.

Should I get a lawyer to review my USRN contract?

Yes, when possible. Having an independent attorney — ideally one familiar with U.S. immigration and employment law — review your USRN contract before you sign is strongly recommended. A reputable agency will give you the contract well in advance and will not pressure you to sign on the spot. If an agency refuses to let you take the contract home or consult counsel, that itself is a serious red flag.

What is contract switching in international nurse recruitment?

Contract switching is the unethical practice in which the contract a Filipino nurse signs in the Philippines is materially different from the one they are presented with after arriving in the United States — often with worse pay, longer hours, different facility, or harsher breach terms. Contract switching is explicitly prohibited under the AAIHR Code of Ethics. The contract you sign in the Philippines must be the contract you fulfill in the U.S.

What is the difference between a direct-hire and staffing-model USRN contract?

A direct-hire USRN contract places you with a single, specific U.S. employer from the start — giving early certainty on facility and pay but exposing you if that one employer cannot follow through. A staffing-model contract places you with an agency that assigns you to one of its client facilities. Grandison uses a hybrid Secure Placement Model: you know your facility and pay rate upfront like a direct-hire, but Grandison can reassign you within its network if your placement is disrupted — eliminating abandonment risk.