Jump to content

Childminders vs nursery - any thoughts please!


aandl

Recommended Posts

Hello everyone,


I am 7.5 months pregnant and exploring childcare options after realising how long the waiting lists are! We have seen 3 nurseries so far with a few more booked in, but I am wondering about childminders also. Sorry to be naive but would love to know people's thoughts on one vs the other, cost differences and recommendations!

Thank you


Lorna

Hi Lorna


I am in the same boat as you (6 months pregnant and looking for nurseries already due to waiting lists).


I am not sure yet, but my initial thoughts are that if it's a small baby, I'd be inclined for a nanny (1-2-1) or perhaps a childminder. However if your child will go to day care when is already walking and has started interacting with other children, a nursery may provide a diversity of stimulating and fun activities (judging for the visits i have made to nurseries just recently).


My second thought is around number of people involved. I am sure that most childminders are lovely, caring and responsible but it does give me a bit more 'peace of mind' knowing that there is a number of people in charge as oppose to the responability only falling on one person.


I'd be keen to hear too from other mums as with you, i am trying to figure out the same answer myself!


Claudia

I think it's a very personal choice, as all things are with babies, and your first instinct is usually right on who and how to look after your own. My first was with childminders until age 2, and second I have in a nanny share with one other child the same age which is working great. For me what I wanted, beyond safey, was one warm, consistent, caring person who got to know what the baby liked, needed etc. Plus a quiet space for naps which I'm not always convinced of at nurseries. I think a good childminder will do lots of fun activities and take the baby outdoors and to classes, but unlike nursery it will be calmer and the baby will get what they need more promptly than in a bigger group.


For my first there were two childminders working together which was great for if one carer had a sick day. Plus double help and less lonely for both childminders. Switching to nursery at 2 felt a bit early to me and she would have been fine another year but by 3 she really needed more kids her age to play/fight with!


I wouldn't panic too much about nursery places. All the good local nurseries have daft waiting lists which I think often are run a bit randomly. Getting a place seems down to luck and calling on the right day! It's worth being a bit persistent and keeping in touch with a nursery to track your progress on the list especially near the time you need a place.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • The permission covers two properties, the retail unit and a first floor flat, so it is in part already a residential building. There appears nothing in the documents to suggest change of use, which I don't think would be classed as 'minor' which this is. 
    • That's interesting. I assumed it wasn't going to stay as a retail unit, given the years of ongoing work. I assumed it was going to be either an extension to the mosque or a residential building.
    • Brexit - but not simply the act of leaving the EU, as damaging as that is in and of itself But everything around it. - the madness of "taking back control", "they need us more than we need them", the increase in volume and extremity of lies required to get it over the line, the clear denial of reality - all of that has led to the current situation where parties of left and right can win huge majorities and find out the beast of anti-immigration can never be sated the course correction involves acknowledging as a country that we need immigration and lots of it (related: acknowledge we aren't as special case when it comes to asylum and refugees - other countries take proportionally more)  We need to be part of the EU. Climate change in and of itself will see global increase in migrations - we need to be building systems that welcome and accommodate the future - not stick our heads in the sand like hobbits  If we don't collectively agree around this then the descent into authoritarian right-wing madness will continue
    • We are certainly better as a country than implementing the latest vile proposals from Mahmood  about seizing immigrants' jewellery https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/nov/17/refugees-jewellery-asylum-home-office?CMP=share_btn_url
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...