Anonymous wrote:This would be ideal for a single nanny who’s works for another family in the neighborhood. A great way for a nanny to regroup! The money saved in rent alone is incentive enough.
Look in your own neighborhood, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I think it sounds good for someone in a very specific situation, like daytime college/grad school or trying to make it as a writer or something. It's sort of the equivalent of working at a restaurant or bar at night to subsidize your arts. If there will regularly be months with 0 hours, though z they WILL need another job unless they are living off student loans, and that would make the 30 hour weeks really tough for them. Can you give any kind of sense of what the average would be?
Anonymous wrote:If the guest house is nice and very livable long term, I think it could work out great for the right nanny.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think this complies with tax laws.
Anonymous wrote:Would the nanny be able to hold a full-time job?
Anonymous wrote:If you're offering a guest house residency with 'free' rent and only babysitting for 10 hours or less a week, I think that would be desirable for an individual.
Like an au pair but even APs get paid. I'd probably expect a baseline pay of $400 or so a week.