How to hire a nanny in Sharjah
To hire a nanny in Sharjah, filter the verified directory, shortlist two or three profiles, interview them and check references, agree the duties and salary in writing, then sponsor the visa yourself or through a licensed Tadbeer centre and start with a short trial.
Duties and responsibilities of a nanny
A nanny's job is the children - their routine, safety, meals, play and learning. Unlike a maid who helps with kids, a nanny is focused on them first.
- Planning and following the children's daily routine
- Preparing meals and snacks for the children
- School runs, homework help and activities
- Bathing, dressing and bedtime routines
- Keeping the children safe and their areas tidy
Agree the final list in writing. Every home defines the role a little differently.
What to ask during the interview
Put these questions to each candidate - the answers tell you more than a CV does.
- What ages of children have you cared for, and for how long?
- Walk me through how you'd run a normal day with my child.
- How do you handle tantrums, discipline and screen time?
- What would you do in an emergency or if a child got hurt?
- How do you keep children learning and engaged?
How the hiring process works
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Shortlist candidates
Filter the directory and pick two or three nanny profiles that fit your needs, location and budget.
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Interview and check references
Meet each candidate, ask about their experience, and contact previous employers before you decide.
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Agree the terms in writing
Confirm duties, salary, day off and start date in writing, so expectations are clear from day one.
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Sponsor the visa
For a full-time nanny, sponsor the visa yourself as the employer through private sponsorship, or use a licensed Tadbeer centre to handle it for you.
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Start with a trial
Begin with a short trial period to make sure the nanny is the right fit before committing long term.
Still have questions about your nanny visa?
Our team can guide you through every step - from choosing between Tadbeer and private sponsorship to completing the full visa in Sharjah.
Live-in, live-out or part-time for a nanny
The work type decides the cover you get, the cost, and how the visa is handled. Start from how many hours you really need, and when.
Full-time live-in
All-day help and overnight cover
The worker lives in your home and is on hand for most of the day. For a nanny, someone is there for early starts, the school run and bedtime - the main reason families with young children pick it. Plan for a private room, fair rest hours and a fixed weekly day off.
Full-time live-out
Set daytime hours, private evenings
The worker comes in each day and heads home in the evening. For a nanny, you get set hours around school and keep your evenings to yourself. It can cost a little more per hour, but you keep your space to yourself.
Part-time
A few hours or specific days
The lightest, most flexible option. For a nanny, specific slots are covered - after school, date nights or busy weekends. Part-time and hourly help should be arranged through a licensed agency, never informally, so the worker stays legal and covered.
Hiring in Sharjah: what's different
Sharjah searches usually put more weight on value, commute practicality and daytime routine fit. For a nanny, that shapes whether live-in or live-out makes more sense, and how fast you should move on a strong profile.
Important: Employers must assess the worker's background, experience, confidence, and overall suitability before hiring. Background verification and final hiring decisions remain the employer's responsibility. Our platform provides access to candidate profiles registered on the platform and basic profile verification only.
Found someone who fits? Open the profile and start the conversation.
Need occasional cover? Browse
babysitters. Or see
maids