Anonymous wrote:$15 an hour nanny here. In Loudoun county. Do not know anyone making more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.
Anonymous wrote:
No one ever said that $30./hr. is an "average" rate, so for the 8:54 poster to make that claim, is blatantly wrong. She appears to be misleading us intentionally. If not, please clarify your remarks, 8:54.
I for one have quoted a 10-30+ /hr. range. Many Washington families have higher expectations for the caregivers they hope to hire, and can afford the higher than "average" associated costs.
In addition, we really have zero data to support any accurate market rate of a "nanny". We can't even agree on what a nanny is, and isn't.
If you want to use care.com as your resource (as someone here already has) for local market rates, maybe you ought to consider the fact that their quoted range starts at $5. per hour, which we all know is outright illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.
How much you pay, depends on who you want.
Lots (but NOT most) parents in the Washington are can afford the 20 to 30 range for a professional nanny who is everything they want. Mostly, that means a well-established history of proven success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I imagine a pediatrician would rather hire a nanny who was well-educated about early childhood development.
They'd pay what it cost because they understand it'll be much more expensive later, if they don't.
I imagine you're wrong. Pediatricians know that a degree in early childhood development is basically a joke.
Anonymous wrote:
I imagine a pediatrician would rather hire a nanny who was well-educated about early childhood development.
They'd pay what it cost because they understand it'll be much more expensive later, if they don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.
$30/hour? LMAOOOO. Now that's a delusional myth that is VERY rare. If this was the case then most people would skip college and go strait into nannying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.
How much you pay, depends on who you want.
Lots (but NOT most) parents in the Washington are can afford the 20 to 30 range for a professional nanny who is everything they want. Mostly, that means a well-established history of proven success.
I can afford $30/hour nannies but I'd never pay one that much. I didn't become successful being silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.
How much you pay, depends on who you want.
Lots (but NOT most) parents in the Washington are can afford the 20 to 30 range for a professional nanny who is everything they want. Mostly, that means a well-established history of proven success.
Anonymous wrote:
No one ever said that $30./hr. is an "average" rate, so for the 8:54 poster to make that claim, is blatantly wrong. She appears to be misleading us intentionally. If not, please clarify your remarks, 8:54.
I for one have quoted a 10-30+ /hr. range. Many Washington families have higher expectations for the caregivers they hope to hire, and can afford the higher than "average" associated costs.
In addition, we really have zero data to support any accurate market rate of a "nanny". We can't even agree on what a nanny is, and isn't.
If you want to use care.com as your resource (as someone here already has) for local market rates, maybe you ought to consider the fact that their quoted range starts at $5. per hour, which we all know is outright illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get paid $15/hour in high school and that was 7 years ago in Indiana
Looks like the "$15/hr market rate nanny" is a grand myth well promoted by a couple of individuals on this board. From what I hear out in the real world, it's closer to $20-30/hr. for professional nannies in the Washington area.