Nanny Website Checklist
What to Put on a Nanny Website
A nanny website should make your experience easier to trust without making families read a full resume first.
Start with your care lane.
Families should quickly understand what kind of nanny work you do best: infants, toddlers, school-age children, travel, household support, high-profile households, or long-term private family care.
Include the details families scan for.
Your site should make the most important information easy to find.
- Short professional bio
- Experience summary and specialties
- Preferred roles, age ranges, and location
- Credentials, training, and testimonials
- Contact path or agency inquiry instructions
Make your resume easier to understand
The website should frame your experience before someone opens the full document.
Keep it polished and practical.
A nanny website does not need to be flashy. It needs to feel current, organized, mobile-friendly, and clear enough to support better-fit conversations.