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    How Much Is A Homemaker Worth?

    The life of a homemaker is one that includes an endless amount of demands and to-dos. Depending on the size of the home and family, the position of homemaker can go well beyond the usual nine to five. We examined some of the tasks that a homemaker might do to find out how much his or her services would net as individual professional careers. We only take into consideration tasks which have monetary values and use the lowest value for each calculation.

    Private Chef
    Meal preparation is one of the major tasks of most homemakers. From breakfast to dinner, there is plenty of meal planning and cooking to be done. The American Personal Chef Association reports that its personal chefs make $200 to $500 a day. Grocery shopping is another chore that needs to be factored in. A homemaker must drive to the supermarket, purchase the food and deliver it to the home. Grocery delivery services charge a delivery fee of $5 to $10.

    Total cost for services: $1,005 per five day work week x 52 weeks = $52,260 per year.

    House Cleaner
    A clean and tidy home is the foundation of an efficient household. Typical cleaning duties include vacuuming, dusting, sweeping, scrubbing sinks as well as loading the dishwasher and making beds. Professional maids or house cleaning service providers will charge by the hour, number of rooms or square footage of the home. For example, bi-weekly cleaning of a 900-square-foot, two-bedroom apartment with five rooms, costs $59-$124 . A 1,300 square-foot, single-story home with seven rooms runs $79-$150 . A 2,200 two-story, three-bedroom home with nine rooms averages $104-$180 . Additional tasks such as oven or refrigerator cleaning and dusting mini blinds can run an extra $20-$25.

    Total cost for services: $118 per week X 52 Weeks = $6,136 per year.

    Child Care
    Homemakers provide full-time, live-in child care. This type of service from a professional provider would usually come with a host of perks including health insurance, paid vacation and sick days, federal holidays off, dental and vision coverage, and bonuses. The International Nanny Association's 2011 survey found that nannies make $600 to $950 per week in gross wages, on average.

    Total cost for services: $600 a week plus perks/benefits x 52 Weeks = $31,200 per year.

    Driver
    A private car service might seem like a high-end luxury to most, but the beneficiaries of a homemaker get this service on a daily basis. Companies like Red Cap, which provides personal drivers that use the client's own car as the means of transportation, offer a glimpse into the cost of this homemaker task. An elite membership which includes 365 days of unlimited, round-trip service is $1,000 a year plus 33 cents - $2.03 per minute.

    Total cost for services: $1,000 per year + [(estimated miles driven 8000 miles / 50 MPH) x 60 min/hr x $0.33 per minute] = $4,168 total per year.

    Laundry Service
    Clean clothes come at a cost when you have to pay for the service that most homemakers do for free. Professional laundry services charge by the pound. For instance, Susie's Suds Home Laundry Service, Inc. in Texas charges 90 cents to $1.00 a pound to wash, dry, fold, hang and steam your clothes. Items that take longer to dry such as comforters, blankets, rugs and winter clothes are assessed at a price of $12-$15 each.

    Total cost for services: $0.90 per pound x 4 pounds of clothes per day x 5 days per weeks x 52 weeks = $936 total per year.

    Lawn Maintenance
    Basic maintenance of the exterior property is a less common, but possible duty of a homemaker. This could include things such as mowing, debris removal, edging and trimming the lawn. These services cost about $30 a week on average.

    Total cost for services: $30 per week x 52 weeks = $1,560 total per year.

    The Bottom Line
    Total for a year of all services is: $52,260 + $6,137 + $31,200 + $4,168 + $936 + $1,560 = $96,261 per year.

    The daily work of a homemaker can sometimes be taken for granted by his or her family members. However, these services could earn a homemaker a considerable wage if he or she took those skills to the marketplace. Homemakers in general contribute a lot more to the home in addition to these tasks, and no amount of money can fill those needs.



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    • KristelW  •  Chandler, Arizona  •  21 days ago
      They missed Teacher, Financial Advisor and Handy Man
    • tdiamond  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  1 month 6 days ago
      My mom's most important job (in her own words), and the one she excelled at, was to teach us how to be decent loving men. That service was priceless.
    • dee  •  1 month 6 days ago
      I want to know where you get somebody to do yard work including mowing for $30.00 a week. cause that sucker is hired.
    • Karen V  •  1 month 7 days ago
      Oh, also thank you to all the Dads and Husband who support and love their wives, I agree with another poster, MEN are IMPORTANT, too. FAMILIES ROCK.
    • soithasalwaysbeen  •  Mobile, Alabama  •  1 month 6 days ago
      What about us men who work and raise a child alone for years with deadbeat moms? = (
    • DavidG  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  1 month 6 days ago
      Back in the 80s I was audited by the IRS for putting my wife's occupation as a domestic engineer and when they asked me what that was I told them that was a housewife. They didn't appreciate my sense of humor.
    • Charles  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  1 month 6 days ago
      I'm a disabled Veteran and a stay at home dad for 2 boys and my working wife. It is very hard to keep the house clean the best I can do is it looks lived in. I do take them to school but they ride the bus home. I love it and I made a bad sitiation liveable for me by being a stay at home dad. I love it.
    • D  •  1 month 6 days ago
      Zsa Zsa Gabor always said, "I'm an excellent housekeeper. Every time I leave a man I keep his house."
    • HereAndGone  •  1 month 7 days ago
      So, since I do all those things myself, and still work, I must be making well into 200K a year...
    • American citizen and taxp ...  •  1 month 6 days ago
      Men do a lot of work around the house, too - at least I do. I wonder what my services are worth?

      (Yes, I know. I can't wait to read the responses to this one . . . )
    • teresachardy  •  Pleasanton, California  •  22 days ago
      I work 3 days a week in the office, 1/2 day from home and I get a 1/2 day for "me". I spend the 5th weekday with my 9 & 1/2 month old son. I consider going to work "relaxing".
    • Spice  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  1 month 6 days ago
      This is a 2 income society, kudos to those who can afford to have a spouse stay home, be it the woman or the man. Nothing wrong with the woman being the breadwinner and hubby staying home. Respect and appreciation should go both ways.
    • AnnamariaM  •  Murfreesboro, Tennessee  •  25 days ago
      I sure wish I had that kind of money per year! A Homemaker's works is never done, 24/7, not only we don't get paid, we very seldom get any respect for what we do!
    • Linda  •  San Jose, Costa Rica  •  1 month 6 days ago
      some comments are hilarious...better that the article itself
    • kla  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  1 month 5 days ago
      I used to be a teacher and worked every night after work and weekends grading papers and doing lesson plans. I hated it. My house stayed a wreck, and I felt like I only saw my kids 2-3 hours a night. In our area the public schools are horrible, so I was either going to send my kids to private school (and basically work for free) or take them out and homeschool, which I ended up doing. I do cook 3 times a day now, homeschool, clean, etc., but I still think this "job" is much easier than working outside the home. I don't expect any kind of pay because I did all of this while I was working (except cooking lunch during the day). This works for our family because the house is clean, dinner is ready when my husband comes home, there is no hour of homework at night, I am not as stressed out, and we get to spend time together as a family. I understand that many parents HAVE to work and do not have a choice. I feel fortunate that I get to do this, although we have had to cut back tremendously on spending. I tell my husband all the time that I appreciate him going to work and providing for our family, and he appreciates what I do as well. Like I said, it works for us, but it may not work or be possible for everyone. I only think the point of the article was that homemakers should be appreciated more...not that they really deserve to be paid $90K a year.
    • Pertnear  •  1 month 6 days ago
      So how much does the man of the house get paid for opening jars and killing spiders?
    • justaguy  •  1 month 6 days ago
      Just because you can coook does not mean your are a Private Chef.

      Using that logic playing catch in the backyard equals a NFL paycheck
    • Autumn  •  Salt Lake City, Utah  •  1 month 6 days ago
      I started reading some of these comments and at first people seemed to get this article but as I kept reading I was really sad for the other comments of people who just don't get it. I have been a working mom and a Stay at Home mom (which is my current job title) and by far staying at home and raising our children is the hardest job I have ever done. Here is the point of the article for me, is that we all need to show our appreciation to those who choose to stay at home with their kids. The job is hard, messy, never ending, and no pay or "pats on the back" for a job well done. Families are important (and dads you get credit too!!) they are the backbone of this country and we need to support everyone. I feel a lot of the time that I am a second class citizen because I chose my kids over a career, but I would make the same choice over and over again. I don't miss a single moment of their lives, I get to be there to support them and cheer them on every step of the way. And I am sorry but that is not something that can be done when you work 8-10 hours a day. I know b/c I have been there. So Thank you to all the STAY AT HOME MOMS!! You ROCK and you deserve way more than $96,000.00 a year for all you do!!!!
    • PJ  •  Tampa, Florida  •  1 month 5 days ago
      Wired how our Moms teach us how to be loving decent men. I know, my Mom raised me as well. My Dad taught me to work hard and make money so that you can one day support a woman to raise your kids to be good men, because that is a job with real responsibility. Instead, I married a woman who makes a lot of money and I get to be the stay home Dad. I get to teach my children to do everything. We are lucky, my wife was raised by 2 doctors that were too into their careers to have time for the kids, she grew up to be exactly like them. She loves our kids of course, but she has never been very "domestic" not her fault, just is what it is. On the other hand, being raised by my mom, I am very domestic. I am a total Mr. Mom. I run my bush ness out of the house because of the nature of my work. I would bet that a lot of people would like to stay home and care for the house/family if they could swing it financially.
    • Question everything  •  1 month 5 days ago
      what a joke. Taking care of your own kids is something you should have thought about before getting pregnant. If you don't want the responsiblity that is a choice. This goes for men and women that stay home. This is like adding costs to a guy that drives himself to work and makes his own lunch. Well, if you hired a driver it would cost this, and a cook to make your own lunch is this. Then if he takes out the garbage or mows his lawn it would be worth this. This is totally unrealistic. When did we start thinking we are owed something for taking care of ourselves and kids?

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