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If motherhood came with a salary, how much do you think moms should be paid every month?

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Some Experts Have Actually Calculated the Value

Over the years, researchers and surveys have tried to estimate what stay-at-home moms would earn if their responsibilities were financially compensated.

Some estimates place the annual value of a mother’s labor at over $150,000 per year — sometimes even higher depending on hours worked and responsibilities included.

That could translate to well over $10,000 per month.

And honestly, many parents argue even that number feels low considering the workload.

After all, most jobs don’t require overnight shifts followed immediately by early morning responsibilities with no recovery time.

Why So Many Moms Feel Underappreciated

The conversation about “paying moms” resonates because many mothers feel their work is often dismissed or minimized.

Traditional paid work is easy to measure:

  • Salary
  • Promotions
  • Bonuses
  • Titles
  • Performance reviews

Motherhood, on the other hand, produces value that’s harder to quantify — even though society depends heavily on it.

Raising children, maintaining households, and supporting families form the foundation of communities and economies. Yet caregiving labor has historically been treated as something expected rather than something respected.

That imbalance is why the salary question feels emotionally powerful for so many people.

It’s less about literally receiving a paycheck and more about recognition.

Of Course, Moms Don’t Parent for Money

Most mothers would say the love they feel for their children matters far more than any salary figure.

Parenting isn’t transactional. The emotional connection, joy, pride, and meaning involved in raising children cannot be reduced to a monthly payment.

Still, acknowledging the economic and emotional value of motherhood matters because burnout is real.

Many moms are expected to perform endless labor while receiving limited support, little rest, and constant pressure to “do it all” perfectly.

That expectation can become overwhelming.

So What’s the Right Salary?

There’s no exact number that could truly capture the value of motherhood.

Some people say moms deserve six figures annually. Others joke they should earn CEO salaries plus overtime, hazard pay, and retirement benefits.

And considering the responsibility involved, those jokes don’t sound entirely unrealistic.

Because if motherhood were advertised as a normal job posting, it might read something like this:

  • Full-time permanent position
  • On-call 24/7
  • No guaranteed sleep schedule
  • Requires emotional resilience and crisis management skills
  • Responsible for raising future adults
  • No quitting allowed

The truth is, motherhood has always been one of society’s most demanding jobs.

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