I’m paid to be available 24/5, so when a parent is late, I’m not paid extra. I don’t think that’s insane at all. Neither parent has to worry about running out the door during a meeting or losing their nanny, or do they have to scramble to find childcare when their nanny says no to covering travel. It works for us ![]() |
We make $600k/yr and still choose an au pair over nanny. Not only are they expensive, they are in fact full grown adults with their own lives. My au pairs are flexible and truly at my beckon call. |
Income is $300k+ a year. Our nanny works for us full time (40+ hours a week). She watches our 5 year old and 1 year old. She gets all holidays paid, 2 weeks of vacation, 3 sick days. She makes $23/h. We live in Los Angeles |
That is your regular shift, very different than just expecting that the nanny can stay late randomly without any thought to her schedule. Certainly you’re not too dense to understand that. |
Many blue collar workers make a good wage. We shouldn’t be able to support ourselves because we enjoy working with children? That is insane! And when nannies first start in their field, they make less, as with any job. How do you feel about preschool teachers; are they also too far below you to make a living wage? |
No, my base shift ends around 8pm, I’m paid to be available, not necessarily working. If I were working more than 60 hours weekly on a regular basis, I’d negotiate higher. I negotiated for an on call schedule and appropriate pay to go with it. My personal opinion is that families should always negotiate for the widest hours they need, and pay for that availability, then there aren’t issues later. |
BEING IN CALL IS OART OF UOUR SCHEDULE! How do you not see the difference??? |
I can't imagine being able to afford a (good) nanny with a 150K HHI.
To answer your questions, we're in Potomac. 2 kids. When it's all done we pay between 65K and 70K a year for the nanny. Sick leave and vacation. And she deserves every penny. |
Maybe your job after college wasn't as important as a nanny's job. Dime a dozen people coming out of Law School while good nannies are hard to find. "Graduating law school" doesn't automatically mean you are going to make more than a nanny. Lots of assumptions on you part. |
Not for more than 45 hours a week. You sound like a bitch. |
"Graduating law school" means one is graduating the actual law school. People are GRADUATED FROM an academic institution! Take a course in remedial English. |
+1 |
It is “beck and call” not “beckon call”, you idiot. |
You're right OP - it can't be done on 150k/yr.
Our nanny makes about 49k in salary for a 50 hr/week position. Add in the cost of taxes, payroll, bonuses, occasional overtime hours, health insurance premium coverage, etc... the total annual cost to us is probably $75-60k (I have never added every dollar up.) Our HHI is approx. 400k and we live in Kensington. |
Having a good, educated nanny was important to DH and me even though he had started a PhD program and I was earning about 150k a year. We used our savings to pay for our nanny for those three years. By the time my DD started preschool and aftercare, she was leap years ahead of her classmates thanks to our nanny as well as being a very happy and secure little kid. Gratefully, our nanny has stayed in my DD’s life and is a beloved family friend.
So, yes - it can be done only if you have substantial savings and make it a priority. |