Is an au pair a good way to cut the cost of childcare?

An au pair can be a cheaper way to get help with your childcare, but there are several potential downsides.

What is an au pair?

An au pair is a young woman or man, generally aged between 18 and 27, who has come to the UK (generally from elsewhere in Europe) to provide live-in childcare and improve their English in return for accommodation, food and what’s termed ‘pocket money’.

As they live in with the family, you need to have a spare room.

As well as childcare, they can help with ‘light housework’ (which you define as part of your agreement with them, and it’s crucial to get this right), which include preparing the kids' meals.

But they’re not to be confused with a live-in nanny, which is a totally different and far more expensive option.

Au pairs are not trained in childcare or first aid and they’re not classified as employees for tax purposes. Instead, an au pair is seen as being on a cultural exchange programme. They will often be enrolled to study English at a local college.

What does an au pair cost?

Pros of au pairs

Cons of au pairs

One family's experience

Samantha Barnes is a mother of two who runs her own business. She and her husband used au pairs following the birth of their second child.

They tried their first one over the summer for three months. When she returned home they took in a second au pair for a year.

She told me: “It was great for us at the time because of the cost of nursery and because it meant there was always someone on hand to help out. It meant I could work in my studio in the garden but I was close by if something happened. It also meant my husband and I could start to enjoy a bit of a life again, because the au pair could babysit."

However, it wasn’t all positive: “It took them a while to settle in and there was always someone there in the house. Because they're young, it was also something of an emotional rollercoaster dealing with things like homesickness.”

An unregulated industry

As I’ve said in the cons above, the au pair industry is unregulated. There is a trade body, the British Au Pairs Agencies Association, which sets minimum standards for its member agencies but these aren't legally binding.

I asked charity the Daycare Trust why, given the rising cost of childcare, they didn’t promote au pairs more as a possible option.

They replied: “Au pairs are usually live in, so parents need to have the space to accommodate an au pair which isn't an option for lots of the parents we support. Having said that, they are a very valid form of childcare for many parents with older children and lots of parents have really good experiences of using an au pair.”

More on family money

Five ways to cut the cost of childcare

How to claim your Tax Credits

Borrowing from family & friends: how to avoid a row

 

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