Anonymous wrote:If for instance, the nanny stops off at the grocery store for you on the way into work. Aside from covering the cost of groceries, how does compensation normally work for running the errand?
Do you wait for her to come back and tell you what time she left her house and therefore how much time was spent driving and shopping or do you come up with a set amount of $ for the errand?
Anonymous wrote:Save yourself (and your nanny)the hassle and have her run the errand during the normal course of the day.
-you take out the need to calculate extra time/hard to quantify mileage
-Kids get out of the house and work on socializing in new settings
-Nanny doesn't end up feel like your personal assistant (and you can avoid the eventual resentment that will build up when your Nanny feel like she can't say no to requests outside of her work hours)
If this is a once in a while/emergency situation (baby has a fever and you are out of ibuprofen, for example) I would just pay her a bonus amount and leave it at that. And unless it is absolutly necessary that she run errands for you in a pinch, don't ask her to do stuff on her own time (regardless of reimbursement), it won't end well for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Are you talking about a live-in? Or are you talking about a nanny who you are paying an hourly rate for and she does additional errand running while on duty?