Going rate for high school babysitter?

Anonymous
This threads probably been done to death but what's the going rate for a high school babysitter these days? She'd be coming to the house for about an hour to play with two kids, 3 and 5. I will be home while she is present. Tia!
Anonymous
$10
Anonymous
$10-12/hr for high school
$15/hr for college
Anonymous
While $10 sounds reasonable, I just dont think my daughter would interrupt the plans for her day for a job that was for only an hour for only $10. I guess if she had nothing else to do, why not....but its a tiny amount of time and money....

$10 an hour sounds like a good hourly rate for babysitting in general. But I guess unless the hour a day was an hour EVERY day (like every day in the mornings or something?) for the summer, its not really worth it, I dont think....

Just a perspective.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:While $10 sounds reasonable, I just dont think my daughter would interrupt the plans for her day for a job that was for only an hour for only $10. I guess if she had nothing else to do, why not....but its a tiny amount of time and money....

$10 an hour sounds like a good hourly rate for babysitting in general. But I guess unless the hour a day was an hour EVERY day (like every day in the mornings or something?) for the summer, its not really worth it, I dont think....

Just a perspective.


Agree. It would be for a regular days every week.
Anonymous
highschool $8-10
college with lots experience $10-15
Anonymous
We pay our college sitter $15 for 2 kids (4 and 7). We ask her to sit for long days or late nights.

We have a few high school sitter who we pay $10-$12/hr. We ask them when it's under 3 hrs and very local.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:While $10 sounds reasonable, I just dont think my daughter would interrupt the plans for her day for a job that was for only an hour for only $10. I guess if she had nothing else to do, why not....but its a tiny amount of time and money....

$10 an hour sounds like a good hourly rate for babysitting in general. But I guess unless the hour a day was an hour EVERY day (like every day in the mornings or something?) for the summer, its not really worth it, I dont think....

Just a perspective.


I guess work ethics have changed or the person who posted this lives in one of the wealthiest suburbs of DC. When I was growing up (in what is now considered an affluent area, but it wasn't as affluent back then) we didn't feel entitled to be paid what someone with more experience was paid. I worked jobs in highschool and college and I "interrupted plans for the day" so I could pay for things like eating out, gas for my car and clothes. I didn't snub an opportunity to make some money doing something I actually enjoyed.

This may be an opportunity to teach your daughter or son about working her/his way up. I have noticed some of the new college grads interviewing for jobs feel entitled to be making more than the level of experience would allow and they are not as willing to do the grunt work one does at an entry level position. Consequently, they were overlooked for positions or if hired, didn't last long. If my own child scoffed at $10 and hour for what is usually a pretty easy job, I would be concerned and I would have a long talk with her or him.

Just another perspective.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:While $10 sounds reasonable, I just dont think my daughter would interrupt the plans for her day for a job that was for only an hour for only $10. I guess if she had nothing else to do, why not....but its a tiny amount of time and money....

$10 an hour sounds like a good hourly rate for babysitting in general. But I guess unless the hour a day was an hour EVERY day (like every day in the mornings or something?) for the summer, its not really worth it, I dont think....

Just a perspective.


I guess work ethics have changed or the person who posted this lives in one of the wealthiest suburbs of DC. When I was growing up (in what is now considered an affluent area, but it wasn't as affluent back then) we didn't feel entitled to be paid what someone with more experience was paid. I worked jobs in highschool and college and I "interrupted plans for the day" so I could pay for things like eating out, gas for my car and clothes. I didn't snub an opportunity to make some money doing something I actually enjoyed.

This may be an opportunity to teach your daughter or son about working her/his way up. I have noticed some of the new college grads interviewing for jobs feel entitled to be making more than the level of experience would allow and they are not as willing to do the grunt work one does at an entry level position. Consequently, they were overlooked for positions or if hired, didn't last long. If my own child scoffed at $10 and hour for what is usually a pretty easy job, I would be concerned and I would have a long talk with her or him.

Just another perspective.


I'll offer another perspective.

I babysat a lot in high school and college, long enough ago that what I got paid isn't relevant. Sometimes I babysat for a few hours, sometimes longer. I earned a fair amount of money doing so, paid for my books, and food, and saved enough to travel pretty extensively.

But if someone called me and offered me an hour, I'd be hesitant to accept. An hour job generally meant about a 2 hour commitment if you added in time to walk there and back. It also meant that if someone called up with a 8 hour job for the same day I needed to turn it down. Given that, a 1 hour job wasn't that desirable. If it was something that I could fit into a routine (e.g. I had a job doing Sunday a.m. childcare at a church for 2 hours a week, but Sunday morning isn't a time when a lot of things come up, or a job that fit between 2 different classes) then that was fine,

I'm a parent of a young high schooler now. He works a job for 4 hours a week. Those hours are consecutive. If he was offered a job for 4 1 hour blocks instead, say Monday through Thursday for an hour after school, I'd be very hesitant. That would be 4 days he couldn't stop at the library after school, or take a temporary job with more hours, or sign up for a volunteer commitment, or say yes if a friend asked him to the movies.

I'm not saying that I wouldn't have taken a 1 hour job, or that I wouldn't let my kid take one, but I do think it's reasonable to expect that people pay a little more when they're offering a position with such a drawback.

My kid is at the beginning of HS, and he'd probably be delighted to take an 8 hour babysitting job for $50, which is under minimum wage. But for just one hour, I think that $12 to $15 isn't unreasonable.
Anonymous
Well I feel old. I guess things have changed a lot since I was a high school babysitter, 13 years ago. $10 was considered really good, the going rate was closer to $5
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well I feel old. I guess things have changed a lot since I was a high school babysitter, 13 years ago. $10 was considered really good, the going rate was closer to $5


You're a baby! When I got my very first babysitting job (albeit in elementary school) I earned 50 cents an hour, and can remember thinking that the parents who would have me over for an hour and a half and ask for change from their dollar were very cheap!

In college I earned $6 and thought I was doing well.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well I feel old. I guess things have changed a lot since I was a high school babysitter, 13 years ago. $10 was considered really good, the going rate was closer to $5


You're a baby! When I got my very first babysitting job (albeit in elementary school) I earned 50 cents an hour, and can remember thinking that the parents who would have me over for an hour and a half and ask for change from their dollar were very cheap!

In college I earned $6 and thought I was doing well.


There's this thing called inflation....
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well I feel old. I guess things have changed a lot since I was a high school babysitter, 13 years ago. $10 was considered really good, the going rate was closer to $5


You're a baby! When I got my very first babysitting job (albeit in elementary school) I earned 50 cents an hour, and can remember thinking that the parents who would have me over for an hour and a half and ask for change from their dollar were very cheap!

In college I earned $6 and thought I was doing well.


There's this thing called inflation....


I know, my point is that someone who was making $10 in high school shouldn't feel old, as there are geezers like me around!
Anonymous
I'd say $12, but echo what others have said about an hour being undesirable. My DD helped out a friend of mine and it took her 15-20 mins to drive each way (not to mention gas, which we paid for), a little over an hour to be there, and my friend paid $10 at most (sometimes it was $8). After a few weeks of that my DD said she couldn't do it anymore - it wasn't worth giving up her weekend afternoon for $8-10. The time was better spent on homework.
Anonymous
Wow, high schoolers in this area sure are entitled to look down on $10/hour!
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