Anonymous wrote:OP. My rate is $15 pretax. Is that low for one child?
MB here. $15 gross is the standard hourly starting rate for one child in DC and the close-in suburbs. That should get you a good number of candidates, including many non-students. Some, but not all, of the career nannies with more than five years of experience will want more than $15, but you should be able to get someone with an education, good presentation, a 0-5 years full time experience, and a car for that. The nanny's share of employment taxes (income tax, medicare, social security) will be deducted by you from the $15 per hour rate. On top of the $15 rate, you will pay the employer's share of medicare, social security, and unemployment tax, along with workman's comp insurance and reimbursement of her driving expenses (often based on a fed gov rate). You do not need to provide health insurance, but some employer's provide a monthly stipend that the nanny can use to buy insurance.
If you can afford more than $15, you'll attract even more potential candidates.
Most experienced nannies in DC expect "guaranteed hours," meaning you pay for the same number of weekly hours whether you use them or not.