Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I know three women who clean houses for a living (one of them is my aunt) and none of them charge less than $25/hr. Perhaps you know differently, but I spoke from my experience. Sorry you found that a ludicrous amount, I guess.
Housecleaners that come once a week for a few hours charge $25/hr, which makes sense because they spend part of their day traveling between jobs, scheduling to fill a full time schedule, etc. They are also business owners / independent contractors from a tax perspective, not W2 employees. They also frequently do a lot of under the table work.
A regular, salaried position does not commend the same salary. A full time housekeeper does not make more than a full time nanny. And cut the drama, how many toilets could OP have? This is not a full time job scrubbing toilets.
Anonymous wrote:OP I know three women who clean houses for a living (one of them is my aunt) and none of them charge less than $25/hr. Perhaps you know differently, but I spoke from my experience. Sorry you found that a ludicrous amount, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: I think the poster that suggested advertising for a housekeeper who will watch kids was right on. Given that the childcare portion is watching them for an hour or two at most (and often helping while I am there, as my work schedule is unpredictable) or driving them places, YES having a clean, organized house is priority.
I really don't get all the snarky responses. I am not tricking someone into an unsavory job-- this is all upfront-- just askin' PS I get asked to do things at my job I don't like - but there are other parts I do- So maybe someone will be happy to do this split job...
Why is it unreasonable to ask for someone to clean toilets if I ask upfront? Clearly many "professional nannies" will not want to do this- but my kids are in school and or with me most of the day. PS I don't know any individual cleaners that make $25/hr some teams do I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Only half of the job is a nanny job. The other half is a housekeeper job. You usually want one or the other. You'll get a person who can't find what she really wants, so she'll take your job, and hate it.
Anonymous wrote:First the simple answer: yes, there are many nannies/housekeepers who would consider (or who work) a job like this.
Now the details: What kind of housekeeping are you looking for? Full-on cleaning of everything (baseboards, bathrooms, grout)? Or is this a vacuuming, dusting, mopping, laundry type deal? Are you prepared to pay mileage or provide a car for the errands that require driving? Do your kids have any SN? What will their afternoons together look like?
Those details are a piece of the puzzle in terms of what kind of rate is reasonable. I personally think $20 is a little low for FULL cleaning (cleaners make upwards of $25/hr.), but for light to moderate housekeeping it sounds fine.