This is a guest post from my wife. It’s a response to the debate on Erica’s recent article about outsourcing life.
J.D. and I have been employing an independent housekeeper for about 10 years. The one who’s been working for us for almost five years, Michele, is fantastic and we feel lucky to have her. (We found her through Craigslist). Housecleaning is her full-time job.
It took us some time to get over our self-imposed barrier of hiring some help with the house chores. I’m not lazy, and it struck me as a weak, self-indulgent thing to do. But, as J.D. freely admits, he’s a slob. We’d fight over the mess in the house, and time and time again would try to institute a “system” to keep it clean, only to fail once more and descend into arguments. With both of us working full-time, we wanted to spend our time at home in other ways than cleaning.
Still, I felt guilty for paying someone else to do work I didn’t want to do myself. I admit it: It feels weird to pay someone to clean your toilets! And I felt guilty for even being able to afford considering “outsourcing” the housework. After all, anyone can do housework, right?
The “housekeeper dilemma”
Over time, however, I’ve realized that my guilt is misplaced. (Although it still lingers a bit.) Why would I feel any guiltier paying someone for cleaning my house than cooking my food at a restaurant, or growing my food at a farmer’s market, or knitting a hat I buy at a cute store? I can cook; I can grow food; I can knit. But often I choose to pay someone else to do these tasks rather than do them myself. Why does the housekeeper, then, represent such obscene luxury in our debates on the complexities of social economics?
Primarily, I believe it’s because we see our housekeeper face-to-face. We invite her into our homes and our lives. We see the struggles in her life (she’s a divorced mom of two teenagers) in a way that is invisible for the many other jobs we outsource. The agricultural worker doesn’t deliver pears to my door, nor the factory worker bring inexpensive mass-produced products to personally stock the shelves in my pantry. I don’t directly pay the garbage-collector, the office custodian, or the guy who sweeps out the theater after J.D. spills all his candy on the floor. For these things, there’s an insulating layer of “a company” between the producer of the goods and the consumer. With housekeeping, no such dividing layer exists.
Professional housecleaning, like agricultural harvesting, child-care, and many service-industry jobs, is a job that is frequently performed by people without much higher education or unique skills. (Or they are choosing not to use that education or skills, or perhaps there is no market for their particular talents.) These jobs are typically low-paying, but that doesn’t mean the people who perform these jobs are unworthy. I’m all for a living wage, but the more specialized and rare your skills, the higher salary you can command if there is a market for those skills. It’s basic supply and demand. And just because a job doesn’t pay well does not mean that job is demeaning.
I won’t pretend my housekeeper has such a “passion for cleaning houses” that it led her to this profession, but she’s a survivor, and has chosen housecleaning for many personal reasons, not the least of which are the flexibility in her schedule, the freedom to choose the clients she serves, and the chance to be her own boss. The trade-offs include a physically-demanding job, inconsistent income, and a relatively low salary (due to not working 40 hours a week, although at $22, her hourly wage is decent).
I think another part of the “housekeeper dilemma” is the historical disregard for the value of work that has been “women’s work”, and the expectation that if there is a woman is in the house, she shouldn’t need to pay another person (usually another woman) to do the tasks she is supposed to be doing herself. If someone is cleaning a house that’s not their own, they must feel degraded, right? But any work can be found degrading, sustaining, fulfilling or mind-numbing. I doubt that those of you who clean your own toilets feel degraded by the process.
What matters is not so much the type of work but the working conditions and the self-respect possible for the worker. Michele knows her work is valued in our home. The days I come home after Michele has been at my house are like a treat to me! And she knows it — because I tell her. I’d gladly give up other expenses before I cut Michele out of my budget. For her part, I’m pretty sure she values having us a steady clients who always have the check ready on the table and share the garden produce in the summer months.
Everyone outsources
The popular opinion is that anyone can do housework (so you shouldn’t outsource this labor), but does that mean that everyone has to? As GRS readers know, we grow and preserve much of our own food. That’s something I truly enjoy. Housework? Not so much. Someone else might think canning applesauce in a hot kitchen on a 90-degree day sounds like pure drudgery; they’ll outsource the task and get their jar of applesauce at the store. No one gives that a second thought, but there are a lot of outsourced laborers between the apple tree and that jar. Me? I’ll outsource cleaning the kitchen instead.
In my mind, the bottom line is that everyone outsources. Unless you grow, harvest, and process your own food, make your own clothes from fibers you’ve produced and spun, build your own house, create your own power sources, and are completely independent from the long chain of people in the manufacturing economy, you’re paying other people to do that which you do not want to do, don’t want to make time to do, or lack the skills to do. In the modern word, specialization is the norm.
So, do what work works for you — I’ll be in the garden.
J.D.: What sorts of people hire a housekeeper?
Michele: All sorts of people. Students, new mothers, women with careers. It’s usually women, although lately a lot of men have been responding to my Craigslist ad. That kind of makes me a little nervous sometimes, but so far it’s been fine. I think they’re just trying to give their wives a break.
J.D.: Should people feel guilty about hiring a housekeeper?
Michele: No way! Why should they? I had a housekeeper for a while. I had so much going on that I didn’t have the time to clean like I wanted, and I could afford it then. I’d do it again if I could. But I guess some people do feel guilty — especially women. There’s this stigma: People think women should be able to do it all — raise the kids, go to work, clean the house — but they can’t. A housekeeper helps relieve some of that stress. So I guess women feel guilty because they feel like they’re not doing everything they should. But bachelors that hire me? They don’t have one ounce of guilt! I think once people get past the guilt, they love having a housekeeper. It’s just a matter of where your priorities are and what you can afford.
J.D.: How do you feel about cleaning houses? Is this what you see yourself doing the rest of your life?
Michele: Well, my passion is working with animals. I’d love to work in an animal shelter. And I’m a trained doula, but I just haven’t done anything with that. So, I clean. But that’s what I do anyhow. It’s just what I do. It’s in my blood. My dad owned a janitorial service. My sister cleans houses. My mother cleans houses. I clean houses. I like it. I like being my own boss. I like the variety, going from house to house, and I like the flexibility. Last time, you let me adjust my schedule so I could take my son to get a tattoo, for example. I couldn’t do that if I wasn’t my own boss. And it’s pretty good money — if I can fill up my days, which is harder with the economy like it is. But I enjoy it.
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My siblings and I should have helped our mother, and our family did have traditional gender roles. There’s nothing that can be done to change these things now (except try to model more equitable behavior to my nieces and nephews).
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@ Crystal: It’s not about “testing” a guy. It’s about the importance to me of first building a model within my household where we divide all of the work before we then allow ourselves to outsource. Many of my friends have married “good” guys who believe in equality and see themselves as contributors to housekeeping and child rearing, yet the reality is that the woman still does most of the work and the man “helps.” People can have good intentions, but this doesn’t always translate to action. A lot of people of both genders also don’t realize how strong gender socialization is until they passively find themselves in situations where the woman is doing almost everything just because that’s the pattern we are socialized to follow. Or, as I’ve seen happen before, the conflict becomes too great to try to get the man to ACT on his good intentions, so it’s outsources to a nanny and maid.
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I happen to clean houses for a living. This income pays my bills so I can pursue my other interests. I have another business designing home decor, but in a small town there is not enough revenue to live on. I was in retail most of my life and managed high end and discount fashion just making a little over minimum wage. I was making big companies, big profits and getting little in return for my skills and expertise in sales, management and merchandising.
I decided to leave that trade and invest in my own personal skills and talents. I clean houses because I can. I was raised in a household of six kids , five of them boys. We lived in a small bungalow and you could’ve eaten off our floors. My mother ran a tight ship and we all learned to clean the toilets, scrub floors and vacum. This experience has served me well.
I make $25.00 to $30.00 an hour cleaning. I have regular clients that I chose, they did not necessarily choose me. That is the beauty of this occupation, you do get to choose who you work for. When I am going to a potential client to be interviewed for a job I too interview them. I need to know that I can work for the client in peace, without drama or strife. I also love the flexibility of this occupation. I set my hours and the days I work, it just works for me.!!!
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JD: I totally agree with your comment at 101. My point regarding my remaining concerns about housekeepers, is that they let people avoid these issues, so something different doesn’t get modeled for people’s children, nieces and nephews. Instead, they continue to see mommy do most (or all) of the domestic work or they see another woman do it who is paid a low or somewhat low wage. That’s why, even though I could afford a housekeeper, I’d want to first model both parents doing the work before I then maybe phased into outsourcing it.
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To quote Carol Channing:
Children, when you have a house of your own,
Make sure, when there’s house work to do,
That you don’t have to do it alone.
Little boys, little girls, when you’re big husbands and wives,
If you want all the days of your lives
To seem sunny as summer weather,
Make sure, when there’s housework to do,
That you do it together!
(That said: I’m totally in favor of outsourcing things that nobody wants to do if you can afford to.)
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I would have liked to have read this post but found it entirely too long. Plus, I’m rather busy. So I hired a professional reader to read it for me and I’m currently waiting for the cliff notes. When I can browse the abridged copy, I’ll comment.
Don’t you people have something else better to do?
Should I keep my professional reader on retainer in case you write a diatribe on some painter you might hire?
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I worked as a housekeeper my last year of college. I was working full-time in a clerical job and going to school at night, but I got laid off. I was a GOOD housekeeper! My mother trained me well — my customers loved me! And I had absolutely no trouble getting jobs, word of mouth did it all. It was fun and interesting, my customers gave me magazines and books they were done with, and I did extra things for them when there was time. Each time I went to a place if I had time I’d try to tackle a big nasty, like cleaning the refrigerator from top to bottom, or emptying and cleaning the entire medicine chest. There’s something really satisfying about leaving a place all tidy and clean. Like Michelle, I liked the flexibility, lots, and in fact the last semester I was able to take classes during the day. I’ve often thought that if there was a way I could squeeze it in I’d sure like to take on a couple jobs a week like that now, for extra money.
There have been a couple times over the years when there was enough income and enough reason to hire someone to clean MY house. I really enjoyed those times!
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Hi, I have a question and would like some advise and your opinions.
Some people feel reluctant to hire housekeepers because of privacy concern, like they just don’t like having strangers coming into the house and start touching all the stuff around the house. What is something is missing? etc..
So for those of you who have hired housekeepers, how do you feel about this issue? Is it ever a problem for you?
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@KittyBoarder (#108)
I met a few housekeepers in person to get quotes and we talked for half an hour to an hour. I liked Jacquie and she had amazing references. After that, it was a leap of faith like any other relationship. She’s been cleaning our places for the last 3 years and we’ve loved it!
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Thanks for sharing this article. It is really funny to see the dynamics of another couple, and see that we all have our vices (candy spiller!). But I loved the interview with the housekeeper. That was smart. And she is her own boss, I would love to be.
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IRS Pub. 926 seems to be your go-to source for the ‘employee/independent contractor’ question. I expect that’s what your accountant will be looking at to answer your question … It looks to me like if your housekeeper supplies his/her own cleaning equipment, works for other households besides yours, and was paid less than $1700 in 2009, then s/he can be treated as an independent contractor. At $22 an hour, that would mean she needed to have spent less than 77 hours last year cleaning your house, or about an hour and a half per week, by my calculations.
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Scott@111 already nailed this but let me reemphasize that you can easily set things up so that your cleaner is not an “employee”. Be sure she uses her own tools/cleaning supplies, files as self employed and to go the extra mile you could even write up a contract for services from her business.
Don’t stress over this, as Scott mentioned read IRS Pub 926!
On another note I found this interesting to read, it sounds to me that Kris is still trying to justify this expense in her mind/heart. I can relate, both my wife and I travel extensively for work and the last thing we want to do on the weekends is come home and clean the house. Even though we are completely debt free, make a very good living and can certainly justify the expense because of our job requirements I find it amazing that we both still feel a little guilty about it. It definitely seems like a “guilty pleasure” to both of us.
I’m not sure if its the fact that we have both worked very hard all our lives. Both of us started at the very bottom and have worked long and hard to become very successful execs. As a old farm boy who shoveled plenty of you know what, I can appreciate the hard work our cleaning lady does. We treat her as an equal, we consult her about our needs and ideas, we pay on time and give healthy bonuses. We value her as a person and for the services she offers. All the same, it still feels a little like we are being too self indulgent – go figure!
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Although I was critical of Erica’s post (mainly because of her apparent attitude about spending, not because of outsourcing), I don’t think there’s anything inherently wrong with hiring a housekeeper if you can afford it. Housework has traditionally been considered “women’s work” because women didn’t used to be expected to work outside the home. In a way, hiring a housekeeper is something that enables you to be a dual-income household. It is a luxury that you could give up if necessary, but if it fits into your budget and you can still meet your other financial goals, why not?
I actually grew up in a family with a housekeeper, but I’m not sure I’d even be comfortable hiring one myself. I value my privacy, and it would make me nervous to think of someone going through my things. I live alone, so my own chores, cleaning, and laundry aren’t too overwhelming, but if I had to work full-time AND do chores for two or more people, I’d probably be a lot more stressed.
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Sara, you can read my post here on GRS called “The Ten Minute Budget” (Google that phrase to find it most easily) and see my budget numbers. I spend way less than many of the commenters seem to think–and my savings numbers go up every month.
-Erica
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#98 and #100
Industry standard is $20-$35 an hour. $10/$15 an hour-it’s likely they are not paying any income tax. If you got no issue with that-good on ya.
Ruth #79 nailed it oh hiring a housekeeper. I’ve been doing this 20+ years and a good chunk of my work comes from word of mouth referrals.
If you have trust issues-hiring a housecleaner isn’t for you. It’s going to be the 1st person you blame when things are out of place. No one needs that stress.
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This was a great article.
In China, having a housekeeper is common for families who can afford it, and the housekeeper sometimes even becomes part of the family, sleeps there, eats with the family, etc.
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I think hiring a house keeper is something that would never work for me. I would feel like I have to keep things cleaner for their sake and it would become more annoying than helpful, by which I mean instead of taking a load off my shoulders it would give me more of one. Whenever I stay in hotels for instance it’s a bother because I feel like I can’t make myself home.
And if I DO make myself home, then things get moved and it’s even worse. For one thing, I don’t like it when people touch my things, I never have. I wouldn’t feel safe. I’d keep worrying they’re going to break it or damage it or something. I know it’s a silly thing to be afraid of but I am.
Plus, I don’t want to have to look for things. f they’re on the floor I know where they are. I don’t want to have to open a drawer every time.
That must make me sound very bad but that’s how I work I guess.
If it was just to hire someone to wash the kitchen and washroom though, that’s different I think. That would be fine. But I wouldn’t be comfortable with anyone going into my bedroom and seeing my stuff. (And by stuff I mean books, videogames and things like that, so nothing to actually be ashamed of).
But if it fits your lifestyle, then it’s good. And $20 per hour is more than I’ve ever earned (actually, it’s double the most I’ve ever earned) so it pays better than I would have though. Which also means there is no way I could afford it anyways
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This was a great post and helped me rethink some preconceptions I had about who hires at housekeeper.
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Professional housecleaning is the luxury I miss most from my pre-kid days. There’s no way I can justify it on our current budget, but it will be the first thing I bring back when “disposable income” is no longer the punchline to a joke in our house. I love having my house be clean, and I LOVE not being the one to clean it.
Good for you!
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We’ve had housekeepers before and it’s great, but mostly because it forced us to pick up before she came over. And really, half of of our battle is just the picking up. If I could train someone to be a great picker-upper as well as a cleaner, then I’d be all set. I thought it could be our kids but alas, no…
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I would love to be able to hire a housekeeper, it would make things a lot easier.
Neither my wife or I are very neat, and with a young son, it makes it double difficult.
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I think its very sad that people blindly judge those who hire help. Both me and my mother are disabled but our disabilities are not physically visible. We both struggle immensely with judgment passed by neighbors, friends, family and yes the housekeepers themselves.
I am sorry to say after watching so many peoples response to our situation I think it all boils down to envy.
We have both let go of self judgment but it is others who try to make us feel guilty.
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This post is spot on! It rocks. Kris, you managed to touch on all the important parts of this discussion. This was really well done and brought up lots to think and talk about.
I am a guy and I have worked for a cleaning crew and as an house cleaner for individual homes. No work is demeaning or beneath you if you do a good job and whomever pays you appreciates the work you are doing.
Side note: I cannot imagine that a home is a business just because you pay someone to clean your home. You would only report a loss every year. It would be your housecleaner’s responsibility to report her income. But…I am not a pro on taxes…
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Awesome article! My husband and I have been pondering about getting a housekeeper… he is really pushing for it now, with me wanting to wait a little… but after the wonderful points in the story, I think the time has come. Thanks for taking away the stigma for me.
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interesting post… I do the same because I’d rather spend my time to something important like work and projects.I struggle in keeping my home tidy and a helping hand from expert eases the process
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Now this is ironic. I’ve been reading this site for a long time now, and while I greatly enjoy it, I can’t say that it’s really changed my behavior all that much. Mostly that’s because I’ve never had consumer debt or issues with that sort of thing. But I read it for encouragement on living the simple lifestyle, saving, appreciating what I have, etc.
So, and here’s the ironic part…what combination of post and comments makes enough of a direct effect on me to make a change? This one, that tells me to spend more money on something I can and already do provide myself.
After reading all these comments, my wife and I talked about it, and we’re going to try a monthly housekeeper. Why not? We’re working all the time, we’re saving over half our income, we have no debt other than the mortgage, and the mortgage balance is only about half our combined annual income, so it will be paid off very shortly. We have a much smaller house than we could afford, by conventional standards, we save over half our income already, and I’m only 31.
This post really hit some of the meat of the issue. We outsource some other things, like car maintenance, and I never felt the slightest twinge of guilt about that. But something about a housekeeper always made us feel that “Oh, we don’t want to be THOSE kind of people.”
BTW, I absolutely love doing lawn maintenance, leaf removal, snow shovelling, etc. I spend all day in the office, so getting outside is always a treat, and seeing the tangible accomplishment and feeling useful afterwards makes it all the better. But I’m just not psyched anymore about mopping floors and scrubbing bath tubs.
I certainly recognize the arguments about “You have to clean up before the cleaner comes” irony, but I guess I can think of that almost like hiring a personal trainer. Basically, paying someone to MAKE you do something that will make you feel better afterwards, because you might not do it otherwise. And then, in this case, taking care of the hard part afterwards. (I do not, nor do I ever want to, have a personal trainer).
Anyway, we’re only talking about once a month here, it’s not like we’re hiring a butler.
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Kris, I’m totally inspired to make more money so I can hire a housekeeper!
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We have housekeepers come in twice a month and it’s been a great thing to relieve stress from my wife, who has standards similar to what JD describes of his wife (my definition of “clean” is dirtier than her “dirty”. Since it relieves stress from my wife and I can have a few more hours to spend with her on Saturday now, I don’t feel as weird about it as I once did. It’s all about making lifestyle choices and choosing what you value!
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@JD(#14)
180/month*12months*10yrs = $21600
Nothing against hiring a housekeeper, but what I see from your comments are excuses. If you say that you are a slob, shouldn’t $21600 be a motivation for you to work on your issue?
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I used to be a housecleaner and it was a great way to make money when I was in my 20s. It supplemented sales of my artwork and gave me a good income and flexibility. Now I’m in my early 40s with a career that keeps me very busy and I have housecleaners (they work as a pair) who not only clean the house but do laundry and clean the catboxes. They are awesome! It helps me so much to have this, I really look forward to coming home on Fridays and finding everything so clean!
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I wonder how many women hire a housekeeper because they aren’t able to have serious conversations about their husbands and families doing/sharing the work. J.D. admits he’s a slob-isn’t that such a cliche for men? I wonder how many homes wouldn’t require very much cleaning if the men of the household weren’t slobs to begin with.
I wonder if the authors have read the second shift? Hiring a housekeeper to keep the peace is just another sign of how “womens work” is still left to women. Sorry J.D. but I’m not buying this post.
Ask yourselves if you would consider hiring a male housekeeper? I’m going to wager, not.
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@Nina.. you would be off a little on your comment about ‘ask yourself if you would hire a male housekeeper to keep the peace, I think not’.
First it is not about the gender of the cleaner, but the job done. Second, I have three employees with my small house cleaning business and my employee that has been with me the longest, is my lead clean and is most in demand is a male who is 21 yrs old with one degree under his belt. He enjoys what he does and certainly if his work keeps the peace in a marriage I am pretty sure he would smile and say “job well done then”.
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Nina@131 – wow, how very sexist of you to insult all men as slobs! That would be like me saying all women are horrible drivers!
To set the record straight, I’ve never met a woman OR man who could clean my house as well as I do. I am not a slob and never have been. All of my close guy friends would be equally insulted. Just because the sitcoms today love to denigrate men please don’t fall for the same lunacy.
We’ve hired cleaning staff because we are extremely busy people who travel extensively for work and don’t want to clean on the weekends. And YES, we have had EXCELLENT male cleaners twice. We hire whoever comes with excellent references regardless of sex, age, race, etc.
Let’s not fall for the trap that someone always has to be the bad guy/gal. It may be vogue to insult and sterotype men today in an attempt to uplift women, but it doesn’t make it right. No more than it did when women were referred to as the “little wife” staying at home barefoot and pregnant!! How about we find the strengths of both partners and neotiate solutions that compliment both!
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Kris and J.D. – thank you for this post. What I see in this article that I so rarely see in other discussions about cleaning people or other outsourced work is RESPECT.
It makes all the difference in the world to pay people what their job is worth instead of what you can get away with. All of us know folks out there who are scraping by to make a living and will take what they can get because it puts food on the table. I was very uncomfortable with Erica’s post because she talked about how she was saving money by paying X person Y dollars in the Philippines and that was OK because it was within his or her standard of living there. I was uncomfortable because it made me feel like it espoused an attitude that it’s OK to celebrate cutting our own costs EVEN WHEN THAT COMES AT A COST TO OTHERS.
It’s hard to strike a balance between wanting to cut our own expenses to live the kinds of lives we want while not cutting our costs at the expense of others’ well being – I get that. How do we find that balance? I don’t know. I struggle with it on a daily basis.
Thanks to Kris and J.D. for living that example for the rest of us. Keep up the great work.
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you guys should stop being lazy and start doing your own chores and keep the $22/hr in your pocket
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Just to clarify post 40 and the response: you are not required to pay taxes (FICA or otherwise) for true independent contractors, but you ARE required to file a form 1099 if you pay the individual over $600 per year.
If you are unclear about whether a housekeeper is an independent contractor or employee, you can file for SS-8 with the IRS and they will make a determination.
Filing form 1099 for all annual payments which exceed $600 is very important and can result in tax liability if you do not.
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Great article – I also blogged about this issue after you got me thinking about my own reticence about having a housekeeper. I especially enjoyed the comments from the housekeeper herself. Thanks for sharing.
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For those interested, here’s the link to Nickel’s article on Independent Contractor vs. Employee http://www.fivecentnickel.com/2010/02/19/independent-contractor-vs-employee-whats-the-difference/
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As a single man, I have a team of two women from Merry Maids who come in once a month to clean my 800-square foot apartment. I keep up with the minor cleaning in between visits, and between the two they do all the major work in about an hour and I pay $85 for the service. As they are Merry Maids employees, there is no issue for me with withholding. They do a better job of cleaning than I can, and they free up several hours of my time. Each visit they get the key from the apartment complex property manager while I’m at work, and they have been scrupulously honest.
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I think most of us are looking at the issue backwards. If we can hire someone else to do a job, especially a low-skilled job, then we’re helping that person be financially independent and achieve his/her goals. When I hire my friend’s adopted son, the one who was “this close” to going bad but decided not to, I’m helping him be a healthy person, a productive member of society, a good father and role model to his son. Further, there’s plenty of chores I can do better than I mow lawns – I should be doing those instead.
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Thanks for this post. I have been struggling with the guilt of not being able to do it all. I’m thrilled to say that I am trying out a cleaning service once every month for a reasonable price. I’m just having bathrooms and the kitchen living room done – the rooms that cause me the most stress to keep clean. I’m so thrilled that they will come on Monday to start! Thanks Kris!
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I really like cleaning the kitchen, the bathrooms, and running the vacuum around, and now that I have a new vacuum, I’ll be doing that more often. What I really HATE to do is dust, but it makes me crazy to have things be dusty. Is is possible to hire someone to just come in and dust and do windows?
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I appreciate my housekeeper who helps free up time for me to spend more time with my kids and get the chores done that I have neglected to do. Like sorting through clothes that need to be donated or go through all our documents that either needs to be shredded or filed away. I don’t feel guilty to having a housekeeper cause I only feel guilty when I don’t have time to enjoy my kids.
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I don’t have a housekeeper, but cleaning is the thing my fiance and I fight about the most (in reverse, he’s much much cleaner than me).
Once we finish law school and are each working 70+ hours a week I have no intention of using my valuable free time to do something I LOATHE.
It’s interesting how ideas about this change over time. The home my grandmother grew up in had three live-in servants (one cleaning, one cooking and one doing??) and the home her father grew up in had six. Of course I’m sure some of those were caring for draft animals, but still there was no guilt over hiring people to take care of what needed taking care of. Or maybe there was… I guess I wouldn’t be in a position to know
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It seems that arguments about hiring a housekeeper are about guilt or being able to afford it. I would never hire a housekeeper because one of our pets is an escape artist, and I’d be worried sick about one more person having to make sure she doesn’t sneak out.
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Jan Wong wrote a fantastic series for the Globe and Mail about house cleaning work and how many of the corporate outfits pay minimum wages or less to their employees, so, if you care about workrs, you should hire a self-employed cleaner.
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I found the article and comments very interesting. After reading the GRS article about earning extra money, I’ve started offering housekeeping on my local Craigslist. My husband and I both work, but to speed up our debt payoff, I thought housecleaning is the way to go. I say don’t feel guilty by hiring a housekeeper. I’m very up front and tell people that by hiring me, they are in turn helping me become debt free. Think of it from the housecleaner’s point of view and I’m sure your guilt will subside.
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THANK YOU! I’m a homeschool mom of 4 and STRESSED! I want to “outsource” the housekeeping and don’t know where to start, but I found this. Thank you! Homeschoolers don’t “outsource” the schoolwork…multiple grades typically…so it’s only reasonable that something else HAS to go.
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I don’t feel much guilt about hiring someone to clean my house. Any guilt I do have is firmly tied to the “should we pay money for this” conflict and not the “I should be doing this myself” or “I have a problem paying someone to do things for me” ideas.
I HATE a lot of the cleaning chores, and I hate nagging people to pitch in with cleaning chores. As long as I think we can afford it, I’m going to keep hiring someone to clean. We can afford the money more than the time at this point in our lives.
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As the owner of a privately owned residential and commercial cleaning company, I thought I would give you a little bit of insight as to how a “housekeeper” may think.
I don’t find cleaning someone elses home the least bit degrading. I actually enjoy my work and get a sense of pride when I leave a home clean. I know that I would appreciate walking into my house after someone else has cleaned it for me!
As far as finding someone that is trustworthy… Ask neighbors, friends, even your realtor could possibly give you the names of people that they have used before. It is also a good idea to make sure that the person you hire is licensed and insured. Being licensed, I pay my own taxes. You don’t have to worry about that. Being insured, if an accident (say something is accidentally broken or God forbid, comes up missing) my insurance will cover this. Also, ask the person if they have a problem with you being home while they are there working… if they have issues with that, then I would have issues with them. Pop in on them occasionally if you are not 100% comfortable with them.
I wouldn’t feel guilty about hiring a housekeeper. I plan on having one when I retire! Sit down and figure out how much YOUR time is worth! How much time do you spend cleaning your home that you could be out enjoying your family and doing things that you love.
Hope this helps!
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I never thought we would hire a housekeeper. Growing up, my mother worked full time, did all the cooking and cleaning, sewing, haircuts etc (she is a saint). My father always worked a full time job plus picked up extra hours of work whenever possible. He also did all outside chores and home remodeling etc. When I go married, I had just assumed this was normal and put unrealistic expectations on my wife and myslf. When she brought up hiring a housekeeper after our daughter was born, I have to admit I was judgemental toward her because I was raised to believe you should never pay someone to do something you can do yourself and felt we could both work full time and still do all of the household chores ourselves. Now that we’ve hired a housekeeper, I don’t know why we didn’t do it earlier. The money we spend is well worth it. We don’t fight over chores. We have more quality time together and we are both more relaxed. I would give up a lot of other things before giving up our housekeeper.
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