Want to babysit too?
Everything you should know — from „What am I allowed to do?" to „How do I write an invoice?". Ready to start? Write to me below — I'll help, and we'll build you your own website too.
All info below refers to German law.
What am I allowed to do?
+ From what age can I babysit?
German law (Jugendarbeitsschutzgesetz, JArbSchG) sets it out:
- From age 13, you may do light work — babysitting counts. Condition: your parents agree.
- From age 15, the rules loosen — longer hours, full-time allowed during school holidays.
- From age 18, normal labour law applies.
+ How many hours per day?
Age 13–14: max. 2 hours per day, not during school hours, not between 6 p.m. and 8 a.m.
Age 15–17: max. 8 hours per day, not between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. (some exceptions for events until 10 p.m.).
In practice: under 15 only during the day, evenings only from 15 with judgement.
+ What should I not do?
- Give medication — only if the parents write down exactly what, when, and why.
- Babies under ~1 year if you have no experience — ask an adult babysitter first.
- Drive the child alone (unless you have a licence and the parents allow it).
- Drink alcohol — not even „just a coke" if it's spiked. On the job: no.
- Post on social media without explicit parent OK (pictures of the kid, location, stories).
What you should know (and have)
+ 🚑 Paediatric first-aid course
A paediatric first-aid course isn't a nice-to-have — it's a must. Kids choke differently, infants need different CPR. Courses are offered by Johanniter, ASB, DRK, Malteser — usually 4 hours, €30–50.
Ask your parents to do the course with you. Parents of the kids you babysit love seeing your certificate.
+ 📞 Emergency numbers ready
- 112 — fire & ambulance (injury, breathing problems, serious fall)
- 110 — police
- 116 117 — on-call doctor (nights & weekends, non-emergency)
- Munich poison control: 089 19240 (24/7) — if the kid swallowed something wrong
- Parents' mobile + a second contact (grandma, neighbour) — get before every job
+ 🧰 What to bring
- Fully charged phone + powerbank
- A couple of plasters and wet wipes in your bag
- Snack & water bottle for you
- For drop-offs at your place: small toy kit, a few books
💶 Money & hourly rate
+ What can I charge?
Typical in Germany: €10–20 per hour. Big cities (Munich, Berlin, Hamburg): €15–25. Rural areas: €8–12.
Factors that raise the price:
- Multiple kids at once
- Very small kids (under 2)
- Late evenings or weekends
- Events / birthday parties (often a flat rate)
- First-aid cert, babysitter course, experience
Important: Agree on the price before the first job. In writing (a short WhatsApp is fine) — avoids arguments.
+ Cash or bank transfer?
Bank transfer is better — two reasons:
- Parents can only deduct babysitting from taxes if it's transferred (see below).
- You have proof if there's ever a dispute.
Cash is OK for small amounts or if the parents insist — ask for a short receipt.
🧾 Taxes — do I owe anything?
+ Do I have to pay tax on what I earn?
Short answer: as long as your total annual income stays below the basic allowance (2026: probably around €12,000), you pay no income tax.
As a student babysitting occasionally, you'll be well below that — so usually nothing to do.
Still, you should keep a simple log of what you earned and when (a small spreadsheet is fine). If the tax office ever asks, you'll be sorted.
+ Do I need to register a business?
No, as long as you babysit occasionally. Tax-wise it counts as a self-employed activity without the intent to run a business — no business registration needed.
If you do regular, many hours and earn well above the basic allowance long-term, talk to your parents — then a visit to a tax advisor or the tax office makes sense.
+ Übungsleiterpauschale, Ehrenamtspauschale?
Neither applies to babysitting. These allowances are for sports club / volunteer work. Babysitting is a normal service.
📄 Receipt for the parents (§ 35a EStG)
+ Why do parents want an invoice?
In Germany, babysitting counts as a household-related service (§ 35a EStG). Parents may deduct 20 % of the cost (up to €4,000/year) directly from their income tax.
Example: they pay you €100 → they save €20 in tax.
Conditions:
- An invoice from you (see below)
- Bank transfer — cash is not accepted by the German tax office
+ What goes on the invoice?
- Your name + address
- Parents' name + address
- Date of the job (or period)
- Description: „Childcare at the home of the [Lastname] family"
- Hours and hourly rate
- Total amount
- Note: „VAT-exempt according to § 19 UStG (small-business rule)"
- Bank details for the transfer
A Word or Google Docs template is enough — no special software needed.
+ Sample invoice — is there a template?
Yes! I have two ready for you:
- 📄 Open the invoice template — fill in directly in the browser, then „Print → Save as PDF".
- 🧾 Open the receipt template — shorter than an invoice, good for cash payments.
Tip: fill in once, save as PDF — you have the template for all future jobs.
🛡️ Insurance — who pays if something breaks?
+ What if I accidentally break something?
If you knock over an expensive vase or the kid throws their parents' laptop on the floor: in most cases the parents' household liability insurance (Privathaftpflicht) covers it — you're a minor and covered by your family policy.
Important: ask your parents before your first job whether your family policy covers „Gefälligkeitsschäden" or „paid activity". Some policies exclude it.
+ What if the child gets hurt?
The child is covered by their parents' health insurance — treatment is covered.
If you were grossly negligent (e.g. left the child alone → serious fall), the insurer can claim back. So: stay alert, document briefly what happened, and call the parents immediately.
+ Should I get my own insurance?
For occasional babysitting: no. If you do it regularly (multiple families, many hours), a professional liability insurance for childcare can make sense — but that's mostly relevant from 18.
🤝 First meeting & trial job
+ How does a good intro meeting go?
- 30 minutes is enough — at the parents' home, with the kid present.
- Introduce yourself: age, school, hobbies, do you have siblings.
- Ask about the child: bedtime, allergies, favourite games, dislikes.
- Ask the rules: screen time, sweets, bedtime rituals.
- Exchange emergency contacts.
- Agree the hourly rate and whether cash or transfer.
+ What to clarify before the first job?
- Where are plasters, first-aid kit, thermometer?
- Where's the house/apartment key (if you go out)?
- Movement permission: can you go to the playground / bakery?
- Food: what's allowed, what isn't?
- Bedtime routine: book, song, night light?
- What if the kid won't sleep?
📣 How do I find clients?
+ Where do I advertise best?
- Word of mouth — ask your friends' parents. Works best.
- Flyers: supermarket, bakery, daycare entrance, playground noticeboard. Nicely designed flyers with a photo + QR code to your website attract more parents than plain phone numbers.
- Parent WhatsApp groups in your school / neighbourhood (ask your parents to post).
- Your own website — see below ⤵️
+ What not to post?
- Your full address — district or postal code is enough.
- Pictures of kids you babysat (not even „anonymised").
- On TikTok / Insta as a minor — talk to your parents first.
🌐 Bonus: your own website
My dad and Claude Code built this site for me — and we'll happily do the same for you. Anywhere in Germany. Your own URL, your photo, your words, ready in a few days. Costs you nothing. Tick the box below — that's it.
Write to me!
Tell me a bit about you — I'll get back to you and help you get started.
Note: I'm a babysitter myself (14) — everything here is from my own experience, put together with my dad's help. It's not legal or tax advice. For large amounts, regular work or anything uncertain: talk to your parents, a tax advisor, or the German tax office directly. Laws change — as of 2026.