She started with their first. He was six weeks old, and the parents were the kind of exhausted that makes people cry in grocery store parking lots for no reason. She came five days a week, 7am to 6pm. She was twenty-nine. They were thirty-two. None of them knew what they were doing.
By the time the third child arrived eight years later, she had her own key, a parking spot, and an emergency contact spot on every school form in the family. She remembered the mother’s coffee order from the first week and still made it that way. She knew which kid would push back on bedtime and which one would fold immediately if you just sat quietly in the room. She knew when the father was having a hard week at work before anyone said anything about it, because the house got a certain kind of quiet.
This is what people mean when they talk about exceptional nanny placements. Not the first year, when everyone’s being careful and professional and on their best behavior. The eighth year, when someone’s been through the middle-of-the-night fevers and the preschool meltdowns and the school year that didn’t go well and the summer that turned out better than expected.
Long-tenure nanny relationships don’t happen by accident. They happen because families treated the position like the professional role it is from the beginning – work agreements, fair compensation, respect for boundaries, annual reviews where compensation actually moved. Nannies who are treated like indispensable professionals stay like indispensable professionals. The families who act like they’re doing someone a favor by offering below-market pay and no benefits tend to find themselves searching again every two or three years.
What changes across a decade isn’t just the children. The relationship changes. In the early years it’s professional warmth – genuine but boundaried. By year four or five, most families and their long-term nannies have seen each other through things that soften people: illness, loss, hard seasons at work, the shift in a marriage that happens when you’re both just trying to survive small children. The nanny who’s been there for all of it occupies a role that doesn’t have a clean name in most family structures.
That intimacy creates its own complications. The boundaries that were easy to maintain in year one can drift in year six. The family starts treating the nanny like a confidante. The nanny starts having opinions about family decisions that aren’t hers to have. None of this is catastrophic, but the relationships that survive it are ones where both parties know what the relationship is – warm, real, genuinely caring, and still professional. That’s not a contradiction.
The children are the most complicated piece. The kids who grow up with long-term nannies often describe them as formative in ways their parents weren’t expecting. The nanny who was there for the ordinary Tuesday afternoons and the homework battles and the scraped knees and the first heartbreaks – that person matters in a way that’s hard to measure. When the arrangement eventually ends, and it always does eventually, some families handle that transition well and some don’t. The ones who handle it well have already understood for years that their nanny is a person with her own life, her own needs, her own professional trajectory. The ones who don’t handle it well are often the ones who let themselves believe the relationship was something other than what it was.
Nannies who stay through three babies didn’t just get lucky with a good family. They chose well, they communicated clearly, they maintained their own sense of professional identity through years of work that could have made it easy to blur. Staying eight or ten years in one household is a career accomplishment that deserves to be recognized as one.
The families worth that kind of tenure are the ones who recognized what they had and treated it accordingly. Not every family gets there. The ones who do tend to know it.