Anonymous wrote:This is not your family's problem, it's yours. Suck it up andpay your taxes.
Anonymous wrote:2600 net per month is how much per hour
Anonymous wrote:i'm confused about the math (600 net is 820 gross?). Our nanny is paid 750/week gross, but after we deduct taxes it is 693/week. She deducts her own income taxes, however--perhaps that is where the difference comes in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We both accepted "off the books". I work a 40-hour week. At $15/hour, that's $600/week, $2,400/month. I was just curious what I would need to ask for in the future if I want to work "on the books" and make the same take home pay. When I accepted the job a few months ago, my employers needed temporary care, but today they spontaneously told me they will need care long term. The problem is that if I ask them to pay above the table, they will actually counter with a lower hourly rate to offset the extra expenses of unemployment and social security taxes. I can't afford for my take home pay to be any less. Every little penny counts for me.
Just an FYI, $600 a week is actually $2600/month. There are 52 weeks in a year.
I'm assuming she was going by what the average month would give her. Yes, there are some months that she will get an extra week, that is once every 3-4, but usually when doing finances on a month to month basis, it is easier to say it is 4 weeks only and then you get a bonus every time there is a 5 week month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We both accepted "off the books". I work a 40-hour week. At $15/hour, that's $600/week, $2,400/month. I was just curious what I would need to ask for in the future if I want to work "on the books" and make the same take home pay. When I accepted the job a few months ago, my employers needed temporary care, but today they spontaneously told me they will need care long term. The problem is that if I ask them to pay above the table, they will actually counter with a lower hourly rate to offset the extra expenses of unemployment and social security taxes. I can't afford for my take home pay to be any less. Every little penny counts for me.
Just an FYI, $600 a week is actually $2600/month. There are 52 weeks in a year.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We both accepted "off the books". I work a 40-hour week. At $15/hour, that's $600/week, $2,400/month. I was just curious what I would need to ask for in the future if I want to work "on the books" and make the same take home pay. When I accepted the job a few months ago, my employers needed temporary care, but today they spontaneously told me they will need care long term. The problem is that if I ask them to pay above the table, they will actually counter with a lower hourly rate to offset the extra expenses of unemployment and social security taxes. I can't afford for my take home pay to be any less. Every little penny counts for me.