Blog

How do aged care recruitment services improve staff retention?

Written by E4 People | 6/11/26 1:13 AM

Aged care recruitment services improve staff retention by matching candidates to roles that fit their skills, values and schedule — so the people who start are the people who stay. A specialist agency screens for cultural fit, supports a smooth onboarding, fills shifts quickly to ease pressure on existing teams, and provides ongoing care that keeps workers engaged. Done well, this lowers the burnout-driven turnover that costs Australian aged care providers thousands of dollars per departure.

That's the short answer. Below, we unpack exactly how a quality recruitment partner moves the needle on retention - and why it matters more than ever under Australia's new aged care rules.

Why aged care retention is under pressure right now

Retention is one of the hardest challenges in Australian aged care, and the numbers show it. Annual turnover has been recorded at 37% for registered nurses, 28% for enrolled nurses and 28% for personal care workers, based on national workforce data. For comparison, Australia's overall job mobility rate sat at just 8% in 2024 - meaning aged care loses staff at several times the national average.

Every departure carries a real cost. A pilot study estimated turnover at roughly A$16,634 per nurse, and the lost community investment in a nurse's training can reach an estimated A$150,000 when they leave the profession entirely. Multiply that across a facility losing a quarter of its workforce in a year, and the financial case for retention becomes impossible to ignore.

At the same time, the bar for staffing has risen. Since the new Aged Care Act commenced on 1 November 2025, residential providers must have a registered nurse on site 24/7 and meet a sector-wide average of 215 care minutes per resident per day, including 44 minutes of RN time. Providers can't hit these targets with a revolving door of staff. Stable, well-matched teams are now a compliance requirement, not just a nice-to-have.

This is where a specialist recruitment partner earns its place.

The 7 ways aged care recruitment services improve retention

A good recruitment service does far more than fill a vacancy. It changes who walks through the door and how long they stay. Here's how.

1. Better candidate-role matching from the start

Most turnover traces back to a poor fit - wrong role, wrong setting, wrong expectations. Specialist agencies screen for skills and values, matching candidates to facilities where they're set up to succeed. When someone is placed in a role that genuinely suits them, they're far more likely to stay past the critical first 90 days.

2. Screening for cultural and values fit

Personal satisfaction, positive relationships with residents and colleagues, and a cooperative workplace culture are among the strongest predictors of whether aged care workers stay. A recruiter who knows both the candidate and the facility can screen for that fit before day one — something a job board simply can't do.

3. Faster shift fills that ease burnout

Burnout is a leading driver of aged care turnover, and understaffing is its biggest accelerant. When shifts go unfilled, the existing team absorbs the load until they break. A recruitment service with a ready pool of pre-vetted staff fills gaps quickly, protecting your permanent team from the chronic overwork that pushes good people out the door.

4. Rigorous compliance and credential checking

AHPRA registration, police checks, NDIS Worker Screening, vaccination records and reference checks are all verified up front by a quality agency. This removes the administrative burden from facility managers and prevents the costly disruption of a placement falling through - keeping teams stable and compliant with the 24/7 RN and care minute obligations.

5. Supported onboarding and transition

Retention is won or lost in the first weeks. Agencies that brief candidates properly, set clear expectations and stay in contact through the settling-in period reduce early drop-off. A supported start helps a new worker feel confident and valued - the foundation of a long-term placement.

6. Flexible engagement that suits modern carers

Many aged care workers leave because rigid rosters don't fit their lives. Recruitment services offer agency, casual, contract and permanent pathways, giving workers control over how and when they work. Flexible, worker-led options are consistently linked to higher job satisfaction and lower attrition.

7. Ongoing relationship and career support

The best agencies don't disappear after placement. They check in, advocate for fair pay and conditions, and open doors to training and career progression - all proven retention levers. This ongoing care turns a one-off placement into a lasting relationship, and a stable worker into a returning one.

Agency staffing vs. recruiting alone: what changes for retention

Factor Recruiting alone With a specialist recruitment service
Candidate screening CV and interview only Skills, values, culture and compliance pre-screened
Time to fill a shift Days to weeks Hours to days, from a vetted pool
Compliance checks In-house admin burden Handled by the agency
Burnout risk to core team High during vacancies Reduced by fast cover
Onboarding support Manager-dependent Structured and supported
Post-placement care Rare Ongoing check-ins and advocacy
Early turnover (first 90 days) Higher Lower, due to better matching

The pattern is clear: a recruitment partner reduces the friction and mismatch that cause people to leave, while protecting the team you already have.

What to look for in an aged care recruitment partner

Not all agencies improve retention equally. When choosing a partner, look for genuine healthcare specialisation rather than a generalist firm, a transparent and thorough screening process, fast and reliable shift coverage, strong candidate care and aftercare, and a track record you can verify through reviews and placement numbers.

As an example of the benchmark to aim for, E4 People has made 7,000+ placements across 700+ clients since 2012 and holds a 4.9-star Google rating from 300+ reviews - evidence of a model built on matching the right people to the right roles and supporting them to stay. Whatever partner you choose, those are the signals that separate a true retention partner from a simple labour supplier.

The bottom line

Aged care recruitment services improve retention by getting the match right at the start, easing the workload that burns teams out, handling compliance, and caring for workers well beyond the placement. In an environment of 37% nursing turnover and tightening regulatory requirements, that's not a luxury - it's one of the most practical levers a provider has to build a stable, compliant and engaged workforce.

Sources

  • Australian Ageing Agenda / national aged care workforce data - turnover rates by role
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics - national job mobility rate, 2024
  • Australasian Journal on Ageing (O'Keefe et al., 2025) - retention supports and cost of turnover
  • Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing - care minutes and 24/7 RN requirements
  • Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission - workforce obligations under the Aged Care Act