Anonymous wrote:That does not sound very smart, pp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear parents, you are a bit delusional suggesting "experienced sitter" for $30 per hr. It is still nanny market and they mostly get full-time jobs at that rate for 1-2 children, with benefits. If they want extra hours with someone with whom they have no contract, no holidays paid, etc, they will charge more than their regular rate. All the nannies are now busy working full time, and once the job ends they usually have another one lined up! so, offer better rates if you want "experienced sitter", and mind you do not call the nanny a "sitter" to her face, we hate that. We are not "sitters".
An experienced sitter does not have to be a current nanny. It could be a sitter with years of childcare experience who works for several families nights and weekends to bring in extra money in addition to their day job or working towards a degree.
Anonymous wrote:Dear parents, you are a bit delusional suggesting "experienced sitter" for $30 per hr. It is still nanny market and they mostly get full-time jobs at that rate for 1-2 children, with benefits. If they want extra hours with someone with whom they have no contract, no holidays paid, etc, they will charge more than their regular rate. All the nannies are now busy working full time, and once the job ends they usually have another one lined up! so, offer better rates if you want "experienced sitter", and mind you do not call the nanny a "sitter" to her face, we hate that. We are not "sitters".
Anonymous wrote:I live in DC and babysit evenings and weekends (I have a ft job in another field). I would do it for $30 if you got the twins to sleep before you left and the 3 yo was reasonably easy to put to bed. I charge 20-25 for similar situations now but with only one younger kid.
Anonymous wrote:I would want an adult with experience for this. Not a HS kid or college kid.
I think you could do $30-$35 an hour.
Anonymous wrote:I always put my babies to sleep and then went out. I pay $15 and babysitters are thrilled. I use local girls in our neighborhood
Anonymous wrote:My gut is telling me $30/hr but curious what the DCUM braintrust has to say.
Anonymous wrote:I have twin high school daughters who periodically babysit for a family with 1.5 year old twins and a four year old.
They hire them both for the night, and pay both of their typical hourly rates of $16.
So it is $32 an hour for the parents, but they get two babysitters instead of one.
Anonymous wrote:Daycares are not licensed for 6 week olds, usully 10 week is min age. No sane parent would send 6 week old to daycare, or you are a troll
Anonymous wrote:I have twin high school daughters who periodically babysit for a family with 1.5 year old twins and a four year old.
They hire them both for the night, and pay both of their typical hourly rates of $16.
So it is $32 an hour for the parents, but they get two babysitters instead of one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for Friday/Saturday night babysitters? $30 is insane. I’ve hired a babysitter every weekend since my oldest was born. $15 is the going rate. If you want them to put the twins to bed- $20. This is way more than minimum wage and they also aren’t paying taxes. We put the youngest to bed, then we leave and they play with our oldest and then put her to bed. And then they watch tv for hours or study.
I think there are too many Nannie’s on this board skewing the wages.
This. Pp. In real life no one is paying 30+