Anonymous wrote:I'm planning to go back to work part time in September, and am currently researching care options for my son (7.5 months). During the school year (September - mid-June), I'll need care for him for 15-20 hours per week. During the summer (mid-June - August), I'll only need 10-15 hours per week. If we hire a nanny, I'd also like this person to help us with laundry while my son is napping.
During the school year, we're considering $225 per week (guaranteed), including two weeks off for the holidays and one week off for spring break. During the summer, we'll offer $150 per week. I've read that offering sick days is also customary, so we may include that as well.
Our goal is to be reasonable, fare, and honest, and want our nanny to feel appreciated and taken care of. However, we also don't want to over pay and have no room to increase wages each year.
My questions are -
-Are these wages reasonable and fare to care for one child and do some light laundry if time?
-Is it typical to offer 3 weeks paid time off for a part time nanny?
-Are sick days typical for part time nannies? If so, how many?
Thank you!
That is a very low rate you are trying to offer based on the high end of hours possibly needed (20 school year and 15 summer). That is only $10-11.25/hr! I don't know many PT nannies that are willing to take on that limited schedule for that low of a rate. Even college students will usually want a little more than $2 over minimum wage.
Sick days are not typical, neither is any kind of vacation days. Usually a day off is a day unpaid, though many like myself do work out deals to get guaranteed hours and pay and are willing to switch a not-needed Monday with a Saturday evening of babysitting instead to make sure we can count on that money. So any benefits you give is a plus, but not sure it would balance out with the lower pay.