Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:is this just a dc/nyc thing? i live in dc, no kids yet, and this makes me think i cannot afford a child. i would be writing my paycheck to daycare.
Right..are many people basically just breaking even here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$3150 for two kids in daycare.
There are childcare FSA's if your employer offers one (feds get it) that let you apply $5000 pre-tax money for childcare costs. As you can see, for me that covers less than 2 months of care.
There is also a childcare credit which caps at $3000/child up to $6000 total but is phased out based on income. You have to deduct any FSA money from the credit. So if you only have 1 kid, if you use the FSA you can not use the childcare credit.
For my two kids, I use the $5000 FSA (worth about $1400 in tax savings), and then I get to claim $1000 additional for the childcare credit, but at my income level 80% of it is phased out so I get an extra $200 credit.
Really?? I thought you could only use one or the other, but not claim both
Anonymous wrote:I need to quit my job and open a daycare center!
Anonymous wrote:Nanny $25/hr, 40 hours weekly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1,800 a month for a nanny 50 hours per week. 3 toddlers ages 1,1 and 2.5
Where did you find this nanny
Care.com
Anonymous wrote:is this just a dc/nyc thing? i live in dc, no kids yet, and this makes me think i cannot afford a child. i would be writing my paycheck to daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1,800 a month for a nanny 50 hours per week. 3 toddlers ages 1,1 and 2.5
Where did you find this nanny
Anonymous wrote:1,800 a month for a nanny 50 hours per week. 3 toddlers ages 1,1 and 2.5
Anonymous wrote:$1355/month. 3 kids. Baby and toddler in DoD daycare full time ($1190). Elementary aged child in before school care ($165). Flex schedule so no aftercare needed.