Quick guide

Doula or nanny —
which do you need?

They both support your family but do completely different things at different times. Here's how to tell them apart and figure out what you actually need.

This guide is for educational purposes only. Costs vary significantly by location, provider experience, and scope of services.

A doula supports you — emotionally and physically — through birth and the early postpartum weeks. A nanny takes care of your child on an ongoing basis.

Doula

Parent support

A doula is a trained, non-medical support person whose primary focus is you. They can be hired for birth support, postpartum recovery, or both — and plenty of families hire a doula who never attends a birth at all. What connects all doula work is the same: emotional, physical, and informational support for the parent, not childcare.

"She helped me process my birth, sleep when the baby slept, and actually heal."

Nanny

Child care

A nanny is a professional childcare provider hired on a regular, ongoing schedule. Their focus is entirely on your child — feeding, sleep routines, activities, development, and daily care. They are not there to support your recovery or provide emotional guidance to the parent.

"She started when I went back to work at 10 weeks. She's been with us for two years."

You don't have to hire a doula for birth

This is the most common misconception. There are several types of doulas — and many families hire one for postpartum support only.

Birth doula

Supports you during labor and delivery — breathing, positioning, comfort measures, advocacy, and emotional support. Typically includes 1–2 prenatal visits, on-call availability around your due date, continuous labor support, and a postpartum check-in. Does not provide medical care.

Postpartum doula

Comes to your home in the days and weeks after birth — whether you had a vaginal birth, a C-section, or any kind of delivery. Supports your physical recovery, helps with newborn care and feeding, spots early signs of postpartum mood disorders, and takes tasks off your plate so you can rest. No birth attendance required.

Overnight postpartum doula

A postpartum doula who works night shifts — typically 8–12 hours — handling feeds and settling so parents can sleep. One of the highest-value forms of postpartum support, particularly in the first 2–6 weeks.

Full-spectrum doula

Also trained to support pregnancy loss, miscarriage, abortion, and other reproductive experiences beyond birth.

C-section moms benefit from postpartum doulas too

A postpartum doula isn't just for people who had vaginal births. C-section recovery is major abdominal surgery — and many postpartum doulas specifically focus on supporting recovery, scar care, and the emotional processing of a surgical birth. If your birth didn't go as planned, a postpartum doula can be especially valuable.

How they compare

The key differences at a glance.

Doula Nanny
Primary focusSupporting the parentCaring for the child
Birth attendanceOptional — postpartum-only doulas are commonNo
When they startLate pregnancy, at birth, or just postpartumUsually when parental leave ends (6–12 weeks)
DurationWeeks to a few monthsMonths to years
Medical careNoNo
Emotional supportYes — core part of the roleNot typically
Newborn care helpYes — guidance and hands-on support for parentsYes — directly cares for the baby
Overnight supportSometimes (overnight postpartum doulas)Sometimes (live-in nannies)
Insurance coverageSometimes — growing; check your planNot covered; dependent care FSA may help

How to figure out which one you need

The right question isn't "doula or nanny?" — it's "what do I actually need right now?"

Think doula if:

You're heading into birth and want continuous, personalized support through labor

You're home with a newborn and feel overwhelmed, isolated, or like you're drowning

You had a difficult birth experience and need emotional support processing it

You're struggling with sleep deprivation and need someone to take nights

You have little local support and need a knowledgeable presence in the house

Think nanny if:

You're returning to work and need reliable, consistent childcare on a set schedule

Your schedule is irregular or unpredictable in ways that don't work with daycare

You have more than one child and want them cared for together in your home

You want a long-term caregiver who builds a real relationship with your child

Your child has specific needs that require tailored, consistent care

Can you have both?

Yes — and many families do, at different times. A typical sequence: hire a birth doula in your second trimester → bring in a postpartum doula for the first 4–6 weeks at home → transition to a nanny when you return to work. The roles don't overlap — they cover different phases of the same journey.

What to expect to pay

All figures are U.S. national ranges. Actual rates vary significantly by city, provider experience, and local market — expect to pay more in major metros.

Doula

Average hourly rate (U.S.)~$35/hr
Insurance coverageSometimes
HSA / FSA eligibleYes, with letter of medical necessity [4]
Employer taxesN/A — not your employee

Nanny

Average hourly rate (U.S.)~$21 – $24/hr
Insurance coverageNot covered
Dependent care FSAYes — up to $5,000/yr [5]
Employer taxes (budget for)+10–15% above wage
Why doulas typically cost more per hour than nannies: Postpartum doulas average around $35/hr nationally, [1] compared to ~$21–24/hr for nannies. [2,3] The gap reflects the nature of the work — doulas bring specialized training in postpartum recovery, mood disorders, infant feeding, and trauma-informed care, and they're often available on short notice rather than a fixed weekly schedule. A nanny's value is in consistency and duration; a doula's is in expertise and intensity. Neither is "more expensive than the other" as a category — it depends entirely on how many hours you need.

Nannies are employees — plan for it

When you hire a nanny, you become a household employer. You're responsible for payroll taxes, workers' comp in most states, and potentially benefits. Budget roughly 10–15% above their agreed wage to cover your employer obligations. Nanny payroll services make this manageable — it's worth setting up before your nanny starts.

Sources

  1. PartumHealth. How much does a doula cost? 2024. partumhealth.com — "The national average for an experienced postpartum doula is about $35/hour."
  2. Care.com. Average nanny salary by state. 2025. care.com — "The average U.S. nanny earns about $21.01 per hour."
  3. Sittercity. Average babysitter & nanny pay rates by U.S. city. 2024. sittercity.com — "The average hourly rate of nannies in 2024 is $22.50 per hour."
  4. FSA Store / HSA Store. Doula FSA & HSA eligibility. fsastore.com — Doula services are eligible for reimbursement with HSA/FSA with a letter of medical necessity. Services for emotional support or housekeeping alone are not eligible.
  5. IRS. Publication 503: Child and Dependent Care Expenses. 2024. irs.gov — Dependent care FSA limit is $5,000 per household for single filers and married couples filing jointly ($2,500 if married filing separately).

This guide is for educational purposes only. Costs, availability, and care needs vary by location, provider, and family circumstances.