NewsXtra RSS Feed


The cost of childcare


Every new Mum and Dad, will have found out that the cost of childcare for their new little bundle can cause major concern to their financial situation. It is the very wise future parents that plan their options very carefully when setting out on the “family” route.

Firstly, there are benefits from the government that can help out with childcare expenses. Child Tax Credit is a payment to low income families, (under £50,000 a year). This can range from £545 to £2440 a year, depending on your income and whether you receive working tax credits, there is also child benefit that all parents are able to claim.

Working Tax credits is available to working parents and covers up to 80% of childcare costs, up to £140 a week for one child or £240 for two. The full allowance is payable to families earning less than £5220, as income increases, payments decrease.

Childcare Vouchers of £55 a week free of national insurance and tax may be available from your employer. This is done on “salary sacrifice” which means that you give up £50 of your salary for the voucher, but because you don’t pay tax or national insurance on this then you could save as much as £1172 a year. These vouchers can be used for any registered childcare.

This is all well and good to get this help, but you still have to weigh up whether it is worth going back to work if you have to spend a lot of the hard earned wage in childcare. Some people do not have the choice as they need to keep up to date with their career, to continue in the future, or they just want to go back to work. However many people do not take in to account that there is a cost to going to work. Travel costs, fuel, car costs or bus and train travel all add up. You also have to buy “work clothes” and have your lunch (packed lunches are better!). The quality of life may be worth some sacrifice, if you are there for your children in the early years, these are the years they need you about the most, without being grumpy and stressed about the days work you have just had.

If you do decide to return to work, then there are some cost-saving routes that you can research. You must decide what sort of care you want for your child. Do you want them to be with other children, or are you fine with a one to one environment?

The obvious choice of having mixed groups of children is to send them to a nursery. There are some excellent options available, which should be researched extremely thoroughly, but these can be very expensive. A cheaper option of having your child cared for in a group environment is to nanny share. This is where a group of you agree to employ a nanny or child minder and share the expense between the families. This can fall down a bit if circumstances change with one of the involved families, but the savings can be substantial and there are now websites to help you source families that want to do this for quite a low fee.

You could employ unregistered help at a lower cost, but must be aware of the fact that they will not be registered with ofsted and whether you are prepared to take that risk with your precious child.

If you do go with the nursery option, it is wise to research the fees, as these vary. Some charge per day, some per hour, and some per week. This means that you need to get this right for your personal circumstances. It may also be wise to research the option of your partner and you staggering work hours to reduce the number of childcare hours, or even considering working more from home.

Other family members are also an option for some people, but this again has to be carefully considered as this can cause family difficulties, if grand parents feel they are being taken advantage of. This may also be a problem if the grand parents are taken ill and can’t care for the children any more if they want to have their own holidays.

Children are a joy, but the stress of sorting out their care is one of those things that you MUST get right!

Jane Price, NASHELM MORTGAGE SOLUTIONS


Your Say Your Halesowen

Kiddicare, Kidderminster says...
11:14am Sun 2 Nov 08

Reading this on a sunday morning , can I say how this has entirely spoilt my day. I am now sat at home absolutely furious, totally upset that this article even suggests unregistered care may be an option to consider.
Firstly providing unregistered care on your own premises is generally breaking the law. There are strictly rules and regulations in place to protect children and they are strigent and there for a good reason. Registered childcare providers are working extremely hard at the moment to implement and adapt to all the changes in these requirements that came into force in September 2008 with the EYFS( Early years foundation stage). Unregistered care does not have to meet these requirements that cover the basics, like safety of the setting, suitability of the person providing care, including police checks on those who come into contact with your child, and many other important factors. It also jumps out obviously to me that anyone willing to earn cash in hand, and outside the law, is not someone I would want to trust with anything, especially my children. If they were to be injured( perhaps seriously)in unregistered care they would not be insured, and who would pay the medical bills to get your child back to good health or provide a decent quality of living if they get access to unsecured chemicals, escape from an unsecure garden, are injured by a known criminal! It may seem extreme but thats what these checks are there for, to REDUCE THE RISK you put your child at.
As a registered childminder it annoys me also that the article states the obvious choice for mixed age groups is a nursery! What 8 or 11 year old wants to go to a nursery? To me one of the benefits of childminding is that children are in a safe home-like environment mixing both with children of similiar and different age groups eg, with their siblings perhaps.

The article does not mention childminding apart from on a nanny-share basis which any of the 500+ registered childminders in Worcestershire will tell you is very uncommon basis for childminders. I also beleive this is called a homechildcarer, not childminder.
Childminding is based in the childminders home which if provided for over 2 hours, MUST by law be registered with Ofsted with the same stringent rules and regualtions as nurseries, Daycare and other formal childcare settings.
Even care for over 8's is now under the Childcare register ( the voluntary part) which comes with its own rules and regulations, which as registered providers we all have to meet. Most professional childcarers work to very high standards and self employed registered childminders are no exception. Apart form the tax benefits and government assistance in paying for registered childcare, it really is the safest way to have your child cared for.
SO for some informed information on choosing the right childcare for you, please visit Childcarelink, a government site listing all types of REGISTERED childcare, with contact details, and email or phone advice available.

sarahcelia, kidderminster says...
12:11pm Sun 2 Nov 08

I totally agree with the above comment and when it came to me choosing which childcare option I wanted for my daughter I looked on the website for register childcare and I wanted a childminder so my daughter could be cared for in a home setting. My Childminder was fully registered and had taken more than needed to qualifacations which she paid for herself and showed how much she cared about her job and the children she cared for. Also the money side needs to be considered as if its too cheep you need to question why as the more the childminder does with your children the better they grow as individuals. Both childminders I have had in the last 4 years have done lots with her over and above what is expected of a childminder and it shows in her as a person. I have nothing against nurserys as they do a great job and my daughter attends a great preschool nursery which has been great and gets her ready for school next year. The childminder out does the nursery in my eyes as the age range they grow up with is great and they learn quicker off the older children and learn how to be around the younger ones. My daughter is very outgoing and articulate for her age and has been able to grow to the care of my two great childminders who have seen this in her and have the skills to nurture her and their other children and make their days fun and creative in a safe environment so I don't worry when I have to go to work and earn money as a single parent which I choose to work rather than sit at home and get someone else to pay for everything.

Your sayYour Halesowen

comment Add your comment

Register for a FREE Halesowen News account and you can have your say on today's news and sport by adding comments on articles we publish. The best comments may even get published in the paper.

Please register now or sign in below to continue.

Jane Price Jane Price

LOCAL WEBSITES

Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »