7 Red Flags to Watch for When Browsing Locum Jobs Online

The market for locum work has grown fast, and so has the noise inside it. There are legitimate opportunities buried alongside listings that range from misleading to outright fraudulent. Knowing how to tell them apart before you give anyone your time, your documents, or your signature is just part of working smart in this space.


1. The numbers are suspiciously good


Every specialty has a going rate. Mostly, experienced physicians have a clear idea about it. When a posting blows past that range with no context, it does not automatically mean fraud, but it does mean you should ask why before you get attached to the figure. Rural placements in high-demand specialties can genuinely pay well. But inflated rates are also one of the oldest ways to get a physician to stop asking questions.


2. The posting reads like it was written around nothing specific


Vague listings are a real problem when browsing locum jobs online. A facility with an actual need knows its schedule, patient load, EMR system, and start date. A posting that says "flexible specialty," "schedule TBD," and gives you a region instead of a location is not a work in progress. It is either a placeholder to harvest contact information or a listing that does not reflect a real, ready position. Real locum physician jobs come with specifics.


3. They want a signature by tomorrow


Pressure to sign fast is something to take seriously. Occasionally, a facility does have a tight timeline, and that is fine. What is not fine is a recruiter telling you the deal disappears if you sleep on it. A contract has terms in it, and those terms matter: pay structure, cancellation clauses, housing, and malpractice. Taking two or three days to have someone review it is not difficult. Any agency that punishes you for asking for that time was not offering you something solid to begin with.


4. Credentialing feels like an afterthought


Locum placements require real paperwork. State licensure, DEA, facility credentialing, and malpractice documentation. None of it is quick, and none of it should be waved away. If a recruiter implies they will just "take care of" your licensing without explaining the actual steps, or skips past the credentialing conversation entirely, slow down. Agencies that do this work properly stay with you. They know the timelines. They follow up. The ones cutting corners tend to go quiet when things get complicated.


5. You cannot find anything real about the company


Spend ten minutes before you engage. Find their website and see when it was built. Search for reviews on the forums and groups where physicians actually talk to each other. Check whether the hiring agency reaching out has any kind of success track. A company listing locum physician jobs with no reviews, a brand-new web presence, and a recruiter with no verifiable history is not necessarily criminal, but it warrants a lot more questions before you share your CV or your credentials with them.


6. Malpractice coverage is a non-answer


Make sure to enquire for the provider who gives coverage along with the limits. Ask it directly, early, and in writing. Tail coverage is the part that protects you after an assignment ends, when a claim can still come in. If the agency gets vague or says you can sort that out later, push back. "Later" in this context can mean you're on the hook for something you thought was covered. This is not a negotiating point. It is a basic condition of the assignment.


7. There is no contract, or the contract raises more questions than it answers


Every legitimate locum engagement has a written agreement, and that agreement should be readable. If you were asked to confirm something verbally, or whether its full of undefined terms, missing timelines, and language that seems to intentionally leave things open, get it reviewed before signing. A physician contract attorney or a contract review service costs far less than untangling a bad agreement after the fact.


Takeaway


When you're browsing locum jobs online, the difference between a good opportunity and a frustrating one often comes down to how much information you're given upfront and how willing the other party is to answer questions. ProLocums keeps that bar high. Opportunities listed on their platform come with real details, and their team stays involved through credentialing and placement, not just the initial handoff. If you are looking for something worth your time, start here.

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