Reviewed by the Nanny Lane team · Last updated

How much does a nanny cost in Virginia in 2026?

In Virginia, the average nanny earns about $16.91 per hour. For a typical 40-hour week, that works out to roughly $676/week or $2,931/month. Rates across Virginia fall in the $12–$25/hour range, depending on experience, the number of kids, and what's expected on the job.

Average hourly rate$16.91/hr · Virginia average

These numbers come from 10,331 live nanny listings in Virginia on Nanny Lane. We update this page whenever the data moves.

$676
$2,931
$35,173

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What drives the price

Across Virginia, nannies rates fall in the $12–$25/hour range. Where a family lands depends on a handful of factors. Three of them drive most of the spread.


01

Experience

More experienced nannys command higher rates. Entry-level (0-2 yrs) average $16.34/hour, while the most experienced (6-10 yrs) charge around $19.66/hour.
Avg hourly rate by years of experience

02

Number of kids

One child is the baseline. Each additional child usually adds $1–$2/hour. Twins and infants tend toward the high end.
+$1 to $2/hour per additional child
Hourly rate by number of kids
1 kid (baseline)$16.91
2 kids~$17.91
3+ kids~$18.91+

03

Hours & schedule

Standard weekday daytime hours are easiest to staff. Early mornings, evenings, weekends, and last-minute coverage all push rates up.
10–20%premium for off-hours coverage
Hourly rate adjustment by schedule
Weekday 9–5 (standard)
Evening/weekend+$2–4/hr
Last-minute+$3–5/hr

Also factor in: live-in vs. live-out · household duties beyond childcare · driving · cooking · travel.

Full-time, part-time, and live-in nanny rates

ArrangementTypical hoursAverage rate
Full-time35–50 hrs/week$18.06/hr
Part-time10–25 hrs/week$16.85/hr
Live-inSet by family$17.71/hr

Part-time runs slightly lower per hour than full-time here, which often means strong full-time demand supports higher rates for committed schedules.

Live-in rates are close to live-out here — but the package usually still includes room and board, so the all-in cost can be lower than it appears. The trade-off is space — you'll need a private bedroom and ideally a separate bathroom for the nanny.

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How do Virginia nanny rates compare to the national average?

Virginia sits close to the national average for nanny rates. Specific cities can run higher or lower — major metros typically command a premium, while smaller towns tend to be more affordable.

Hiring nannies in Virginia typically costs about 1% more than the United States average of $17/hour.

Average hourly nannies rates compared across Virginia and reference areas.
AreaAverage hourly ratevs. Virginia
Virginia$17/hr
United States$17/hr-1%

Where nannies cost most and least in Virginia

Across 33 Virginia cities with active listings, nanny rates range from $14.73/hour in Hampton to $20.67/hour in Mc Lean.

Below are the 10 most and 10 least expensive cities for nannies in Virginia and how each compares to the Virginia state average of $16.91/hour.

Most expensive cities in Virginia

Top 10 most expensive cities in Virginia for hiring a nanny, ranked by average hourly rate.
#City$/hrvs. Virginia
1Mc Lean$20.67+22%
2Vienna$19.40+15%
3Arlington$19.39+15%
4Leesburg$19.04+13%
5Falls Church$18.62+10%
6Charlottesville$18.38+9%
7Annandale$18.33+8%
8Herndon$18.24+8%
9Fairfax$17.94+6%
10Alexandria$17.78+5%

Least expensive cities in Virginia

Top 10 least expensive cities in Virginia for hiring a nanny, ranked by average hourly rate.
#City$/hrvs. Virginia
1Hampton$14.73-13%
2Lynchburg$14.74-13%
3Norfolk$14.86-12%
4Roanoke$14.88-12%
5Chesapeake$14.98-11%
6Newport News$15.09-11%
7Portsmouth$15.14-10%
8Fredericksburg$15.30-10%
9Winchester$15.33-9%
10Williamsburg$15.52-8%

Tips to find a great nanny without overpaying

  • Be flexible on experience. Some of the best nannies on the platform have 3–5 years on the job and charge meaningfully less than experienced nannies with 10+ years. References matter more than years.
  • Consider a share. If your kids are similar ages and you live near another family, a share is the single biggest cost reduction available without compromising on care.
  • Be specific about hours upfront. Most nannies will take a slightly lower rate for a guaranteed steady schedule than for a higher-rate, unpredictable one.
  • Bundle benefits thoughtfully. Two weeks PTO, a health stipend, transit passes, education assistance, or an annual raise commitment can help close the gap with families offering a higher hourly rate.
  • Match rate to responsibilities. A higher rate often makes sense once you add cooking, errands, or driving. Don't compare apples to oranges across listings.

How to reduce nanny costs?

Split the cost of a nanny with another family
and enjoy flexible child care.
Learn more about nanny sharing

How families use Nanny Lane to find a nanny in Virginia

Nanny Lane is a marketplace built specifically for connecting families with nannies — no recruiters in the middle. Most families work through it like this:

  1. 01

    Browse nanny profiles in Virginia

    Filter by hourly rate, experience, languages, and availability.

  2. 02

    Message the ones who look like a fit

    Reach out to the nannies whose experience and rate match what you're looking for.

  3. 03

    Schedule a phone call, then a paid trial day

    Trial days feel awkward at first — that's normal. They're the best way to see how a nanny fits with your family in real time.

  4. 04

    Hire your nanny

    If you'd rather not handle taxes and payroll yourself, our payroll team can take care of it.

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