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Paid childcare

Discuss everything related to paid childcare here, including childminders, nannies, nurseries and au pairs.

Is this a reasonable childminding cost?

28 replies

JimbosJetSet · 23/07/2016 14:52

We have found a childminder we like for 4yo DD. We are in the south of England but not London. We need to drop off at 8am and collect at 6pm, but DD will be at preschool for 4 hours of this (CM will drop her off and collect her). CM is quoting £50 per day, not including food. I was expecting less, but does that sound reasonable? Thanks.

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Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
WitteryTwittery · 23/07/2016 14:55

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Gizlotsmum · 23/07/2016 14:55

We are in Cambridgeshire and pay £40 per day including food so that does sound fairly reasonable. We paid for the place even if DS was at preschool as it is a place they can't fill with another child ( especially half days)

snorepatrol · 23/07/2016 14:56

I must be lucky I pay £28 for 8 hours and it's £1 for lunch and snacks

mimishimmi · 23/07/2016 14:58

Sounds reasonable.

JimbosJetSet · 23/07/2016 16:18

Gosh ok, I thought a CM would be cheaper but I think a nursery will be with the 15 free hours and being able to use childcare vouchers. Is that generally the case?

OP posts:
Greenyogagirl · 23/07/2016 16:21

East Midlands it would be £15 with proper meals and drinks included with that Shock

Gizlotsmum · 23/07/2016 16:23

I can use childcare vouchers and free hours with my childminder. When we looked it worked out about the same cost for us. We went with childminder as was right for us

Cindy34 · 23/07/2016 17:20

Full day nursery can use 15 hours funding during 38 weeks term time (or 570 hours over full year). Some childminders accept this funding, as does pre-school.

Childminder, nursery and pre-school may all accept childcare vouchers.

Try to look at future needs... is the childminder near your home and also near the local school which your child is most likely to attend? A nursery may be ideal when they are little but they may not provide before/after school care. Nursery may be large, or may be small. A childminder may care for just a few children, or may have quite a lot (if they have an assistant). Compare different providers, there will be pros/cons to each type of care, cost will vary though try to calculate full yearly cost.

Lonecatwithkitten · 23/07/2016 17:35

I was paying £5 per hour 6 years ago with no meals so yes it's reasonable. I general in my area in the South East nurseries are cheaper than childminders, but spaces at both are like gold dust.

gamerwidow · 23/07/2016 17:49

I paid £4.50/ hour to my cm when dd was this age but that included 3 meals too. I think it's usual to charge for the time dc are at preschool too because they can't use the space for someone else.

Xmasbaby11 · 23/07/2016 18:25

We pay 4 an hour in North west. It doesn't make any difference if they are at pre school in the middle.

goodenoughmum88 · 23/07/2016 18:38

We pay £5 per hour, use vouchers and free hours. We send lunch and she provides snacks (a lot of snacks!!!)

EnglishGirlApproximately · 23/07/2016 18:44

greenyoga where? I'm easy mids and use 2 cm's - ones £32 the other is £30. If you know one for £15 that's amazing!

Nan0second · 23/07/2016 18:47

I pay £4.50 an hour which includes all snacks and meals as well as trips to toddler groups. I would have to pay for 'fancier' trips!

workplacewoe · 23/07/2016 19:13

Perfectly normal to have to pay usual rates while your child is at pre-school as the childminder cannot use that time for another child.
I think £5/hour seems fair.

RitchyBestingFace · 23/07/2016 19:16

£5 per hour in London seems cheap to me. Around my area (Z3 north London) - it's around £7 - maybe £6 for a less experienced one. Even so CM places are like gold dust. Nurseries are generally cheaper than CMs but it is all to do with what you want from your childcare setting.

thisgirlrides · 23/07/2016 21:47

I'm in SE and would charge £60 so if say reasonable. Why not ask if you can use the 15 hours with cm instead of nursery?

Greenyogagirl · 23/07/2016 23:51

Englishgirl, Leicestershire. The group of childminders I know all charge 2.50 an hour and include proper meals with puds etc

mimishimmi · 24/07/2016 01:25

CM's are getting more expensive than nurseries because less people can afford to provide it and the number of children they can have is smaller which means they can market themselves on exclusivity/more one-on-one care etc.

WhimsicalWinnifred · 24/07/2016 08:55

We pay £4 for 8-6. We do receive the 15 hours free as dd is over 3 and both use childcare vouchers. Northamptonshire.

Seems reasonable. It's don't enjoy paying it tbh. I worked out I could get 6.2 nissan jukes for our childcare cosy but cars don't look after kids Wink

thisgirlrides · 24/07/2016 10:34

£2.50ph ShockSadConfused I can't believe people charge this little. With the increases in minimum wage it must make more sense financially to go & get paid employment. If there's s group of cm all charging so low why on earth don't they collectively do something about it & increase to a sensible level.

HSMMaCM · 24/07/2016 11:37

I am a cm that takes vouchers and provides 15 free hours. Check all your options.

KP86 · 24/07/2016 11:51

That would be £60 with my child minder (in SE London) including food but not nappies.

sianihedgehog · 24/07/2016 12:19

We pay £5 an hour not including food in the south-east. Seems standard.

eastmidswarwicknightnanny · 24/07/2016 13:31

Greeny I am Leicestershire and can assure you Leicestershire varies a lot over Kirby, ratby, lfe its £4.50-6 an hr. I pay £13 for 2hrs after school care with meal for ds1 and ds2 goes to nursery as our old childminders (was £32/day that was cheap) and couldn't find another cm we liked enough to pay more than nursery with the added inconvenience of covering hols etc..

Some areas of Leicestershire where abundance of minders £3 seems to be the hrly rate but in more affluent areas and less minders costs are higher.

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