Anonymous wrote:OP I'd recommend not paying it out, but for a different reason. Two weeks notice is a bare minimum. It's the type of notice a nanny gives for a critical life event or for a less than amicable split. Had she offered you 8 weeks notice, which I typically give for families I work with, then you could pay out the vacation time as a reciprocal act of good will.
BTW, even when a contract spells out monthly accrual of vacation time, nannies and families will not typically follow an accrual schedule. UNLESS you also agree to pay out unused vacation days. Otherwise the nanny will be waiting until December to take time off and risk losing all the accrued time if her employment is terminated.
What on earth do you mean? We use an accrual method. Nanny gets 12 days PTO a year for vacation/sick/personal time, all hers to choose how to use. She earns 1 day a month. If she wants to take more time than she's accrued, she takes it unpaid. The only payout she would get is of already accrued days. The point is to avoid a situation where she leaves in the middle of the year, and I would be on the hook for a year's worth of vacation for two people.