Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Chevy Chase, MD)I get $1200 weekly before taxes, 1 baby only. Add the Health Insurance stipend $350 monthly, 10 days PTO and all holidays paid. 5 days of sick leave.
For how many hours/week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pp, no 20 yr old would be allowed to take care of my baby. They are too young to have my required 7+ yrs of experience.
How many years experience did you have when you had your baby? None, I bet. No one needs 7 years experience to take care of a baby. Your mother, grandmother, great grandmother, great great back to beginning of time did not have experience but, somehow, the human race survived and thrived.
Women used to grow up with bigger families. Older siblings took care of younger siblings. Youngest siblings took care of their nieces and nephews
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pp, no 20 yr old would be allowed to take care of my baby. They are too young to have my required 7+ yrs of experience.
How many years experience did you have when you had your baby? None, I bet. No one needs 7 years experience to take care of a baby. Your mother, grandmother, great grandmother, great great back to beginning of time did not have experience but, somehow, the human race survived and thrived.
Anonymous wrote:pp, no 20 yr old would be allowed to take care of my baby. They are too young to have my required 7+ yrs of experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on quality of the applicant. A “nanny” with no experience beyond babysitting and no educational qualifications should expect to start out at $15 or $20. Anyone can claim to be a nanny; it is unlike many professions that require a specific degree.
Also depends on number of kids, special needs, ages. I would expect to pay more for a newborn and I would think parents are more likely to go with an experienced nanny - so yes, $1k sounds right.
But if I found out this “nanny” had no experience, no credentials and was paid under the table, I’d say they are overpaying.
HAHAHAHA. Keep dreaming. $15-$20/hr is a teen date night babysitter.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on quality of the applicant. A “nanny” with no experience beyond babysitting and no educational qualifications should expect to start out at $15 or $20. Anyone can claim to be a nanny; it is unlike many professions that require a specific degree.
Also depends on number of kids, special needs, ages. I would expect to pay more for a newborn and I would think parents are more likely to go with an experienced nanny - so yes, $1k sounds right.
But if I found out this “nanny” had no experience, no credentials and was paid under the table, I’d say they are overpaying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that the going rate now weekly for one baby (6 months)? My former colleague in DC was interviewing potentials and I don’t know if she’s getting the right number. It sounds awful high.
That's $52,000/year. Not even remotely high.
With no OT that's $25/hr which is not high. With OT $18/hr.
Nannies have the same living expenses that you have.
Everyone needs the same basics but some of it is life choices.