Out-of-state license welcome. No credit check. Airport pickup when you land.
You took the Atlanta assignment. You face the predicament of needing a car for 13 weeks and none of the usual solutions work. Makes zero-sense to fly a car down yourself. Only sign up for a lease, which is essentially a loan and a contract that lives on far longer than your contract. And renting for $400 a day for three straight months would pretty much consume your housing entitlement.
That is the exact gap we cover. Weekly billed car hire in Atlanta specifically designed for travelling nurses and contractors, extended as long as your assignment does, returned when you leave. No lease. No credit check. You can call (470) 524-3999 and share your dates.
Why a weekly rental fits a 13-week assignment
Think about how your contract actually works. You are placed for a period of time, usually 13 weeks but sometimes longer, and then you leave or go to the next city. It’s not rocket science; a car has to work the same way.
Here is how ours does it. You rent every week at a weekly rate. You re-book every week for as long as your gig goes. You give back the keys when the contract’s done, and you walk away. You had no early-termination penalty, no looming three-year lease, and you weren’t out trying to sell a car you bought just to make it through a placement.
If you were to bind the rentals for daily use across the same period, that weekly rate would pretty much always land well under what you would be paying. And, with no credit check and no ownership, you are not committing your credit or savings just to make it through a temporary job.
This is situated somewhere between a one-day rental and a traditional residential lease. Some of that original flexibility, a long-haul price like the second, — only neither is definitive.
That is unusual enough to see the other directions a traveler typically contemplates, and why the weekly rental continues its domination. If you buy a used car for a placement, you register it and insure it, then disappear three months later to another city where you have to sell the car. Leasing is even worse, because the term ends years after your contract and depends on a credit check that a thin or out-of-state file typically doesn’t get. Shipping your own car down actually costs a lot of money in both directions. So a day rental is easy to open, then every 30 days, the total climbs for three months until somewhere painful.
Enter the weekly rental, which avoids all of that. You have a car for the duration of the job, you pay every week in rhythmic chorus with when your stipend arrives, and then once the assignment is over, so are you. That sweet spot between how you are paid and how you pay for the car is part of your quiet struggle to never go back again for travelers who give this a shot.
For traveling nurses
You cannot miss a shift because a car would not start. That is the whole job of the car we put you in.
Our renters commute all over metro Atlanta. Emory, Grady, Piedmont, Northside, Wellstar, Children’s at CHOA, and the smaller facilities in between. Some of those drives are quick. Some mean crossing town at shift-change traffic or heading in before sunrise for a 7 a.m. start. The car needs to handle that every single day without drama.
So we keep reliable daily drivers and we maintain them ourselves. If something needs a repair, that is on us, not on you. You should be thinking about your patients, not about whether the check-engine light means you are calling out tomorrow.
A few things nurses tell us matter most:
- A car that starts every morning, including the 5 a.m. ones
- Easy parking in tight hospital decks and garages
- Good gas mileage, because you are driving this thing daily for months
- Someone local to call if anything goes wrong, not a national hotline
You handle the shifts. We handle the car.
Getting to your hospital across metro Atlanta
Atlanta is spread out, and where your housing sits relative to your hospital decides a lot about your day. A car turns a rough commute into a manageable one, and it opens up cheaper housing that is not walking distance from the unit.
If you are placed at Emory in Druid Hills or the Emory University Hospital Midtown campus, you are looking at the connector and Midtown traffic during shift change. Leaving from housing on the south or west side, having your own car lets you time the drive instead of waiting on a rideshare surge at 6 a.m.
Grady downtown sits right in the middle of the interstate tangle, which is fast off-peak and slow at rush hour. Piedmont in Buckhead and Northside near the perimeter both pull traffic up I-85 and GA-400, so a reliable car with good mileage pays off when you are covering those miles daily. Wellstar facilities stretch out toward Marietta and the northwest suburbs, where transit basically does not reach and a car stops being optional. And if you are at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, the campuses moved around recently, so being able to drive between sites matters more than ever.
The point is not that any one commute is bad. It is that Atlanta rewards having your own wheels and punishes not having them. With a weekly rental you pick housing that fits your budget, not just housing you can reach without a car, and you keep the flexibility to pick up a shift at a different site if your agency asks.
For contractors and trades
If you are in Atlanta on a project instead of a placement, this works the same way for you.
You need room for tools and gear, not just a back seat. Tell us what you carry and we will match you to a car with the space you actually need. And when a project runs long, which it usually does, you just keep renewing week to week. No renegotiating a contract, no scrambling to extend a lease. Your rental stretches as far as the job does.
Traveling trades hit the same wall nurses do with the big chains. The counters want a credit card, they want you to be 25, and they freeze a large hold that sits on your account for the whole job. When your work takes you to a new city every few months, that pattern gets old fast. We skip all three. Debit is welcome, renters are good at 23 and up, and the deposit is a flat, refundable amount rather than a rolling hold that balloons with the length of your rental.
The week-to-week structure is the real draw for project work, though. Jobs slip. A two-month install becomes ten weeks, then twelve. With a lease or a purchase, an extension is a headache. With us it is nothing. You call, you keep the car, you keep working. When the job finally wraps, you hand the keys back and head to the next one.
Same reliability, same weekly billing, same local operator who picks up the phone.
Out-of-state license? Here is how it works
This is the question travelers ask first, so here is the flat answer. An out-of-state driver’s license is completely fine. You do not need a Georgia license to rent from us.
Bring the license you already have, wherever it is from. Add a deposit and a way to pay, and you are set. Your credit file being thin or based in another state does not matter here, because we do not run a credit check at all.
The deposit is $250, or $300 if you are 23 or 24. You get it back at the end of your rental. That is the whole story on deposits, no surprises layered on top.
What you need to rent
We keep the list short on purpose. To rent with us you need:
- A valid driver’s license. Any US state works. Out of state is fine.
- To be 23 or older. Renters aged 23 and 24 pay a $50 higher deposit, and that is the only difference.
- A deposit. $250, or $300 for 23 to 24 year olds. Refunded at the end of your rental.
- A way to pay. Debit cards are welcome. Other payment options are available if you ask.
No return flight. No utility bill. No credit history. You bring those four things and your assignment dates, and you can usually drive the same day.
How a weekly rental fits your stipend
Travel pay is built from pieces. Your taxable base rate, then the non-taxed stipends for housing and meals and incidentals. That structure is exactly why a weekly car rental works so well for the way you actually get paid.
Your stipend lands on a schedule, and your rental bills on a schedule that matches it. There is no giant upfront outlay the way there is with a car purchase down payment or a lease drive-off fee. You are not fronting thousands and waiting to earn it back across the contract. The cost stays even and predictable from the first week to the last, which makes it easy to budget against per diem.
A quick note worth raising with your own tax advisor. Some travelers track transportation costs tied to a work assignment away from their tax home, and a clean weekly invoice makes that recordkeeping simple. We are not tax professionals and this is not tax advice, but we can give you clear documentation of what you paid and when, which is more than a rideshare receipt pile will do for you.
The short version is that a weekly rental behaves like the rest of your travel budget. Steady, scheduled, and sized to a contract rather than to ownership.
Pickup and airport shuttle
Most travelers fly into Hartsfield-Jackson to start an assignment, and we are minutes away in College Park.
You land, you call, and we get you into your car. We run a shuttle to and from the terminal, so you skip the SkyTrain ride out to the airport rental center and the counter line that comes with it. From there you drive straight to your housing and get settled. If you are weighing airport pickup against the alternatives, our honest guide to renting at ATL walks through it.
The cars
Most travelers fly into Hartsfield-Jackson to start an assignment, and we are minutes away in College Park.
You land, you call, and we get you into your car. We run a shuttle to and from the terminal, so you skip the SkyTrain ride out to the airport rental center and the counter line that comes with it. From there you drive straight to your housing and get settled. If you are weighing airport pickup against the alternatives, our honest guide to renting at ATL walks through it.
For agencies and recruiters
If you place travelers in Atlanta, we can make the car part easy for all of them.
We work with staffing agencies and recruiters who need reliable transport for the nurses and contractors they bring into the metro. One point of contact, weekly billing that matches your travelers’ contracts, and cars ready when they land. Call (470) 524-3999 and ask for ongoing arrangements, and we will set something up that fits how your placements run.
Extending, renewing, or coming back for the next contract
Assignments rarely end cleanly on the day the contract says. You extend for four more weeks. You take a second contract at the same hospital. You finish one placement, go home for a bit, then land another Atlanta assignment two months later. Your car should keep up with all of that.
Extending is the easy case. You are already renting weekly, so you just keep renewing. Nothing changes, no new paperwork, no gap. If your placement gets extended mid-contract, tell us and we roll right on.
Coming back for a new assignment later is just as simple. A lot of travelers work Atlanta more than once, because the hospital systems here staff travelers year round. When you come back, you already know how we work and we already know you. Call ahead with your new dates and we line up a car for your arrival.
And if you are doing back-to-back contracts in different cities, we can be the Atlanta piece of that puzzle whenever your rotation brings you through. You do not have to solve the car problem from scratch every single time.
What sets a local operator apart from a chain
You could rent from a national chain for a long assignment. Plenty of travelers try. Here is what tends to send them looking for a local option a few weeks in.
A chain treats a 13-week rental like ninety daily rentals stacked end to end, with a credit card and an age-25 minimum and a hold that ties up hundreds of dollars the whole time. If the car has a problem, you are routed to a national call center and maybe sent across town to another branch. Nobody there knows your name or your schedule.
We are one operator in College Park who answers the phone. You get someone who knows you are a traveler on assignment, knows the hospitals you might drive to, and can sort a car problem without a corporate script. That difference does not show up in an online quote. It shows up at 6 a.m. on a Monday when something goes sideways and you need it handled before your shift.
Reserve for your assignment
Tell us your dates and we will have a reliable car waiting when you arrive. No credit check, no lease, no missed shifts over a car that would not start.
Call (470) 524-3999 or see how our weekly rentals work. Worried about credit or a debit card? Here is how renting with no credit check works.
Deron runs Xclusivibez, a weekly and long-term car rental in College Park, Atlanta. We rent to traveling nurses and contractors often, and we know the assignment lifecycle. Call (470) 524-3999 or email info@xclusivibez.com and tell us your dates.