Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We hired a great, experienced nanny for $15 an hour and increased her pay each year up until $20 for two children (40 hours a week guaranteed).
She was well known in the area, great with kids and legal.
I will say we had a number of candidates to choose from for $15/ hour. Ignore the $30/ hour posters.. unless you can afford to pay that.. some may make more, some may make less but as long as you are clear on what you are offering and have a contract, the nanny will be able to decide if she wants to accept the job.
You did not find an educated, experienced nanny for $15 an hour.
Op try it and see who shows up for your interviews.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having just looked at this and hired a nanny for my infant in the DC metro-
1.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny in DC? About $15-22 an hour + overtime, taxes, bonuses, insurance, ect., on average. Range varies even outside that based on education, special needs, number of guaranteed hours, years of experience, location...
2.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny share in DC? I was seeing about $5-10 more an hour for a two kid share.
3.) Is there some sort of governing 'how to' document in setting either of these up? Any resources I should be privy to? Internet and talk to other nanny families - preferably on a non-anon basis.
You are simply not to be believed. No decent nanny in this area takes a job for $15/hr, unless she has someone else to support her, and your kid is her "hobby".
Those people do exist - even if you're not one of them.
OP - what you pay depends on what important to you. I didn't see anyone asking for more than $22 for infant care, but this forum is plagued by some folks claiming you should be paying a nanny more than you make per hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having just looked at this and hired a nanny for my infant in the DC metro-
1.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny in DC? About $15-22 an hour + overtime, taxes, bonuses, insurance, ect., on average. Range varies even outside that based on education, special needs, number of guaranteed hours, years of experience, location...
2.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny share in DC? I was seeing about $5-10 more an hour for a two kid share.
3.) Is there some sort of governing 'how to' document in setting either of these up? Any resources I should be privy to? Internet and talk to other nanny families - preferably on a non-anon basis.
You are simply not to be believed. No decent nanny in this area takes a job for $15/hr, unless she has someone else to support her, and your kid is her "hobby".
Anonymous wrote:Having just looked at this and hired a nanny for my infant in the DC metro-
1.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny in DC? About $15-22 an hour + overtime, taxes, bonuses, insurance, ect., on average. Range varies even outside that based on education, special needs, number of guaranteed hours, years of experience, location...
2.) What is the typical cost of a full time nanny share in DC? I was seeing about $5-10 more an hour for a two kid share.
3.) Is there some sort of governing 'how to' document in setting either of these up? Any resources I should be privy to? Internet and talk to other nanny families - preferably on a non-anon basis.
Anonymous wrote:We hired a great, experienced nanny for $15 an hour and increased her pay each year up until $20 for two children (40 hours a week guaranteed).
She was well known in the area, great with kids and legal.
I will say we had a number of candidates to choose from for $15/ hour. Ignore the $30/ hour posters.. unless you can afford to pay that.. some may make more, some may make less but as long as you are clear on what you are offering and have a contract, the nanny will be able to decide if she wants to accept the job.
Anonymous wrote:We hired a great, experienced nanny for $15 an hour and increased her pay each year up until $20 for two children (40 hours a week guaranteed).
She was well known in the area, great with kids and legal.
I will say we had a number of candidates to choose from for $15/ hour. Ignore the $30/ hour posters.. unless you can afford to pay that.. some may make more, some may make less but as long as you are clear on what you are offering and have a contract, the nanny will be able to decide if she wants to accept the job.
Anonymous wrote:The cost can vary. You can illegally hire someone who does not have the right to work, does not speak English, does not drive etc.--but will make a reasonable effort to ensure that your daughter is still alive and breathing when you come home. You can probably get this for as little as $10/hr.
You can hire a professional nanny with a Masters in a relevant field with a decades of experience and who speaks several languages which she is willing to teach your daughter. This will cost you closer to $30+/hr.