I know that volunteers put it together and so I can't critique it too much, but my main question is average nanny pay per hour. Why doesn't it ask that? I believe that many answers on this board are skewed high, so I was looking forward to getting different data. |
Why? Decide what you want to pay and see who you get. Nannies education, experience and skills differ so their hourly quotes do as well. |
+1. |
It asks average pay per hour for babysitters. I assumed it did the same for nannies. |
Low end nanny pay is about $18, higher end is 30+ per hour. Your high school and college sitters are of course less expensive. |
What are you smoking? |
+2. |
Have they released the new one? I haven’t seen it, but the old one had average nanny pay taking into account various factors (one kid vs two or three, etc).
Nannies rightfully charge more for more kids, or might charge more on an hourly basis if they work less than full time. I think it makes a tremendous amount of sense broken out as it is, and the prices they list on the doc are low in my experience— certainly lower than the rates of any of the nannies we interviewed and less than we pay our nanny now. |
This article says $20-$25, but that is according to nanny agencies. Agencies tend to inflate the price a bit, IMO. I’d like to think they have standards for education and experience, but I don’t know if that’s true.
I’m paid almost $30/hr, but I’m a nanny/house manager. The top factors in pay are experience, education and responsibilities. https://www.northernvirginiamag.com/family/family-features/2019/07/11/thinking-about-hiring-a-nanny-heres-what-you-can-expect/ |
What? Yes it did. |