A few months ago, we worked with a Puget Sound family that was searching for a split-shift nanny.
For families unfamiliar with the term, a split-shift nanny typically works two shorter shifts during the day. In this case, the nanny would help the children get ready for school in the morning, drive them to school, leave during the middle of the day, and then return later to handle school pickup and after-school care.
The family initially offered $25-$28 per hour.
After nearly two weeks, they had received only two applicants.
At that point, they increased the pay range to $33-$38 per hour.
Within 72 hours, they received 14 applications.
The lesson wasn’t that every family should pay $38 per hour.
The lesson was that nanny compensation is influenced by much more than the number of children or the family’s zip code. The schedule matters. The responsibilities matter. The experience requirements matter. And as we’ll discuss later in this article, one of the biggest costs families face isn’t the hourly rate at all — it’s having to repeat a nanny search because the fit wasn’t right the first time.
After helping families hire nannies throughout the Seattle and Puget Sound region for more than a decade, we’ve learned that the true cost of hiring a nanny is about much more than an hourly wage.
Let’s take a closer look.
What Is the Most Common Nanny Pay Rate in Seattle Right Now?
As of June 2026, the most common nanny pay range we see throughout the Puget Sound region is approximately $30-$35 per hour.
That doesn’t mean every nanny earns $30-$35 per hour.
Nor does it mean every family should offer $30-$35 per hour.
However, when we look across the positions being advertised throughout the region and the expectations we hear from professional caregivers, that range consistently appears as the most common starting point for many standard nanny positions.
Rates can vary significantly based on:
- Location
- Number of children
- Ages of the children
- Schedule requirements
- Household responsibilities
- Experience requirements
- Specialized training
- Long-term versus short-term needs
A nanny caring for one infant may command a different rate than a nanny caring for three children. A childcare-only role may require a different budget than a household assistant position. A traditional full-time schedule may attract candidates differently than a split-shift schedule.
Every position is unique.
One of the Biggest Mistakes Families Make When Advertising a Nanny Job
Many families advertise a nanny position using a single pay rate.
For example:
“$32 per hour.”
While that seems logical, it can unintentionally reduce the number of candidates who ever see the position.
Many nannies search for positions using minimum pay requirements. A nanny who is only interested in jobs paying at least $33 or $34 per hour may completely skip over a position advertised at $32 per hour.
The family may have been willing to pay $33 or $34 per hour for the right candidate, but because they only advertised one number, they never had the opportunity to connect with that candidate in the first place.
This is one reason we often encourage families to advertise a realistic pay range whenever possible. You can benchmark a fair market range for your specific position with our Seattle Nanny Pay Calculator.
A range creates flexibility.
More importantly, it helps ensure that strong candidates aren’t filtering themselves out before conversations even begin.
The Biggest Surprise Families Encounter
Another common misconception is that the hourly wage represents the entire cost of employing a nanny.
In reality, professional nannies are often looking for more than just an hourly rate.
Many families are surprised to learn that candidates frequently expect benefits such as:
- Paid time off (PTO)
- Paid sick leave
- Paid federal holidays
- Guaranteed hours
These benefits have become common in professional nanny positions and are often an important part of attracting and retaining quality caregivers. Seattle families should also be aware of the Seattle Domestic Workers Ordinance, which establishes rights for nannies and other domestic workers in the city.
Because of this, we encourage families to budget beyond the advertised hourly rate.
One simple rule of thumb we often share is to take the nanny’s hourly rate and add approximately 10%.
For example:
- $30/hour becomes roughly $33/hour
- $35/hour becomes roughly $38.50/hour
This isn’t an exact formula for every situation, but it can help families build a more realistic childcare budget before beginning their search.
Nannies Set Their Own Rates
One of the most important concepts for families to understand is that nanny pay rates are not established by a government agency, labor union, trade organization, or industry board.
Every nanny sets their own rate.
One nanny may be looking for $28 per hour.
Another may require $35 per hour.
Another may only consider positions paying $40 per hour or more.
Their expectations are influenced by factors such as experience, education, certifications, schedule requirements, market demand, and personal career goals.
Because every nanny sets their own rates, compensation should be viewed as a conversation rather than a fixed industry standard.
The market is simply thousands of individual caregivers deciding what their time, skills, and experience are worth. Browsing real, current postings on our Seattle nanny jobs board is a quick way to see how families and candidates are actually meeting in the middle.
Another Hidden Cost: Waiting Too Long to Adjust Your Budget
One of the most expensive mistakes we see families make isn’t overpaying.
It’s spending weeks pursuing a budget that the market simply won’t support.
A family may decide they want to hire a nanny for $28 per hour when the position they’re offering is more likely to attract candidates at $32-$35 per hour.
There’s nothing wrong with testing the market.
However, problems can arise when families continue searching for weeks without adjusting their expectations, even after receiving little interest from qualified candidates.
During that time, life doesn’t stop.
Parents may delay their return to work.
They may rely on relatives for temporary childcare.
They may spend hours reviewing applications that don’t quite fit what they’re looking for.
They may piece together backup care arrangements while continuing the search.
All of those things have a cost. (We dug into this dynamic in more depth in one of the biggest mistakes families make during a nanny search.)
Sometimes the least expensive decision isn’t holding firm on a budget.
Sometimes the least expensive decision is recognizing what the market is telling you and adjusting early.
We’ve seen many families save themselves weeks of frustration simply by making a realistic adjustment to their compensation range and reopening conversations with candidates who may have previously passed on the opportunity.
The goal isn’t to spend more money than necessary.
The goal is to reach the finish line efficiently and hire the right caregiver for your family.
The Family That Almost Missed Their Perfect Nanny
Earlier this year, we worked with first-time parents who were searching for a nanny for their first child.
Like many first-time parents, they wanted more than childcare.
They hoped to find someone with significant infant experience who could help guide them through the early stages of parenthood.
We introduced them to a candidate whose typical rate was $38 per hour.
The family’s budget was lower.
At first glance, it appeared that the two sides might not be a match.
However, the nanny felt strongly that the position sounded like a great fit and agreed to meet with the family.
The interview went exceptionally well.
The family loved the nanny’s experience, personality, and approach to childcare.
The nanny felt equally positive about the family.
As the conversations continued, both sides showed flexibility.
The family increased their budget slightly.
The nanny adjusted her expectations slightly.
Ultimately, they agreed on $37 per hour.
Today, they are still happily working together.
The lesson is that the difference between a good candidate and the right candidate is sometimes much smaller than families think.
In this case, the deciding factor wasn’t compensation.
It was fit.
One of the Most Expensive Mistakes a Family Can Make
When families think about the cost of hiring a nanny, they usually focus on the hourly rate.
But one of the biggest costs is something that rarely appears in a budget spreadsheet:
Running the same nanny search twice.
Imagine spending weeks reviewing applications, conducting interviews, checking references, making an offer, onboarding a nanny, and helping your children adjust to a new caregiver.
Then two months later, you realize the relationship isn’t working.
Now you have to start over.
You have to post another job.
Review another round of applications.
Schedule another round of interviews.
Potentially take additional time away from work.
And help your children transition to another caregiver.
In our experience, one of the best ways to avoid this situation is to focus heavily on personality fit during the hiring process. Families who want hands-on help vetting candidates for that kind of long-term fit can explore our Concierge Service, or compare lighter-touch options on our Family Memberships page.
Over the past 10 years, we’ve found that one of the strongest indicators of long-term success is when both the nanny and the family feel genuinely excited about working together.
Pay matters.
Experience matters.
Schedule compatibility matters.
But if the nanny and family don’t enjoy each other’s communication style, expectations, energy level, or overall approach to childcare, the relationship often becomes more difficult to sustain over time.
The families who have the most successful placements are often the families who view personality fit as a requirement rather than a bonus.
The goal isn’t simply to hire a nanny.
The goal is to hire the right nanny the first time.
What Does a Nanny Really Cost?
The true cost of hiring a nanny isn’t just the hourly wage.
It’s the hourly wage.
It’s paid time off.
It’s paid holidays.
It’s guaranteed hours.
It’s all of the benefits and commitments that come with employing a professional caregiver.
But it’s also the cost of getting the decision wrong.
Families who focus exclusively on finding the lowest hourly rate often miss the bigger picture.
The families who tend to have the most successful outcomes usually focus on value instead.
They learn what the market looks like.
They build a realistic budget.
They remain flexible when they meet someone exceptional.
And they place a high value on personality fit.
Because when compensation, experience, schedule compatibility, and personality fit all come together, that’s when great nanny-family relationships are built.
The goal isn’t to find the cheapest nanny.
The goal is to find the right nanny the first time.
Need Help Determining What a Nanny Position Should Pay?
If you’re planning to hire a nanny in the Seattle or Puget Sound region, start by understanding what today’s market looks like.
Our Seattle Nanny Pay Calculator can help you estimate a competitive pay range based on your family’s unique situation.
If you’d like more personalized guidance, Nanny Parent Connection’s Concierge Service helps families navigate compensation, evaluate candidates, and focus on long-term fit from the very beginning.
The right nanny can have an enormous impact on your children’s lives and your family’s day-to-day happiness. Taking the time to build the right budget — and find the right fit — can save significant time, money, and stress in the long run.