How much are you prepared to pay a babysitter per hour? $5, $10, $30? After asking around, especially in Australia, there doesn’t appear to be a standard or accepted rate or if there is, no one can quite agree on what it should be.
According to this recent article in the New York Post however, it would appear that in parts of the US, the babysitters themselves have the upper hand and are setting the rates, some as high as $33 per hour PLUS perks.
Donna Ladd, style editor of a magazine, was toiling away in the Hearst tower when she received a text from her son’s babysitter — with the young lady’s $40 sushi order.
Ladd, as usual, called in and purchased her $20-per-hour sitter’s takeout because, as she put it, “I felt huge pressure because I wasn’t paying her as high as she wanted.”
As it turns out, all the sushi in the world wasn’t going to be enough to make this particular babysitter stick around and she later defected to another family who not only paid her desired rate of $25 per hour, but also threw in car access.
Many parents aren’t impress but really, is this such a high price to pay to someone who has the responsibility of looking after your most precious possession? And really, $25 per hour for these services, in the most expensive city in the world, really doesn’t sound all that outrageous to me.
The article went on to say:
“New York City sitters are the most expensive in the country, according to a new UrbanSitter study. And they’re only getting pricier. Since last year, the average hourly rate for one city child has jumped from $13.50 to $15.34. Compare that to $11 per hour in Chicago or $10.84 in Denver. The sad thing is this: $15.34 sounds like an absolute bargain to most New York parents, who have been quoted as high as $30 per hour by sitters barely out of high school.”
In Australia, these amounts don’t really appear to be too dissimilar. We are talking about casual babysitters here, not nannies. Nannies (or Mannies) are paid on a different basis and have different expectations and job requirements so the two really cannot be compared. But as for paying a person, qualified or not, on a casual basis to mind your child while you are out, it appears the average in Australia being paid, is around $15 per hour.
In the US however, it’s becoming big business, with elite services starting to pop up due to the demand:
Top Comments
mmm, just to note that even with your pets you pay for them to go into a boarding kennel or cattery, so why should we not pay for children to be baby sat or nanny sat whichever you prefer :)
I doubt there are many babysitters out there who 'take advantage' of families, the same cannot be said of families taking advantage of babysitters. I have been babysitting (or nannying- which is what I call during the day babysitting) for over 9 years, and have worked for many families. I currently work for 3 families. Most families have treated me well- providing me food, backing me up when it comes to gently setting appropriate boundaries for children- but there are many exceptions that come to mind- parents coming home at 3am when they say they will be home at 11pm is one example! I have recently raised my rate from $22 to $25 per hour, after one family voluntarily gave me a pay rise (I had worked for them for 5 years!), but charge less ($20 per hour) in the evenings when its usually a few hours play then bed time (although this is not always the case with infants and toddlers!). I have copped some flack from one family for the $3 per hour increase, which is interesting since I know for a fact that their other, less qualified nanny gets paid $25. In my other job (tutoring at a university in children's development), I earn over $40 per hour, so no I do not feel like my rates are unreasonable. I have friends who work in retail who get paid more than $25 an hour. I declare all my earnings to the tax office. One final point- many parents somehow think that it is less work to look after children when the parent is home. That is not the case- especially with young children it can be a challenge to keep them away from mum and dad so that mum/dad can actually do the things they need to. I had one mother who used to walk out the front door then go into her home office through the back door, which used to see her son be much better behaved, easier to engage and settle quicker because he didn't know she was there!