The short answer: part-time staff are paid with exactly the same logic as full-time staff — a monthly amount divided by a working-days base, settled against attendance — the only difference is the base. A once-a-week gardener has roughly 4 working days a month, a twice-a-week cleaner about 8, and a "1st and 15th" deep-clean visit exactly 2. Get the base right and every missed visit has an exact, agreed price; get it wrong (or leave it vague) and every absence becomes a fresh negotiation.
Why part-time arrangements cause more disputes than full-time ones
Full-time staff attendance is binary and daily — easy to notice, easy to remember for at least a day or two. Part-time visits are sparse and irregular by nature: was the gardener here last Tuesday or the Tuesday before? Did the twice-a-week cleaner come once or twice during your travel week? Sparse events are precisely what human memory handles worst, and a missed ₹250 visit feels too small to argue about — so it silently accumulates into resentment on one side or overpayment on the other. Sparse schedules need records more than daily ones, not less.
The working-days base for every common part-time pattern
| Arrangement | Working-days base / month | Example: per-visit value on ₹2,000/month |
|---|---|---|
| Once a week (e.g. gardener, every Sunday) | 4 | ₹500 |
| Twice a week (e.g. cleaner, Tue & Fri) | 8 | ₹250 |
| Three chosen days a week | ≈13 (3 × 30 ÷ 7) | ₹154 |
| Fixed dates (e.g. 1st and 15th) | Exactly the number of dates — 2 | ₹1,000 |
| Month-end visit (last day of month) | 1 | ₹2,000 |
Two things worth agreeing explicitly at hiring: which days count (a "twice a week" arrangement without named days is unverifiable), and what a missed visit costs — which the table answers automatically: Monthly Amount ÷ Base. From there, the standard attendance formula applies unchanged: (Visits made + Half visits × 0.5) ÷ Base × Monthly Amount.
Per-visit rate or monthly amount — which to agree?
Both work; they're the same number viewed from different ends. A monthly amount ("₹2,000/month for twice a week") is easier to budget and is the norm in India and the Gulf. A per-visit rate ("₹250 per visit") is the norm for hourly and agency arrangements in Singapore, Australia, and the US. If you've agreed a per-day or per-visit rate directly, use it as the daily rate and multiply by visits made — StaffAround supports a custom per-staff daily rate for exactly this arrangement, overriding the computed monthly-divide.
What's a "half day" for someone who comes twice a week?
The same principle as full-time staff, scaled to the visit: came but did half the agreed scope, left mid-way for an emergency, or covered one floor of two. Count it as 0.5 visits. Because the per-visit value of part-time work is high (₹500 for the weekly gardener above), the half-visit convention matters proportionally more than it does for daily staff — a standing rule prevents a ₹250 conversation from becoming personal.
Tracking sparse schedules without thinking about them
The trap with part-time tracking is that there's no daily rhythm to hang the habit on — which is why notebooks and spreadsheets fail even faster here than for daily staff. An app carries the schedule for you: in StaffAround you set the pattern once — once a week, twice a week, specific weekdays, fixed monthly dates (including "last day of month"), or fully flexible — and the app counts the actual scheduled dates in each calendar month as the working-days base, so a month with five Tuesdays is calculated correctly without anyone noticing. Attendance stays one tap, entries accidentally marked on non-scheduled days are excluded from the salary with a note, and the month-end salary slip shows visits made against visits scheduled. Free for up to 2 staff members.
The part-timer portfolio problem
Most households don't have one part-timer — they have a constellation: a daily cook, a twice-a-week cleaner, a weekly gardener, a monthly deep-clean service. Each has a different base, a different rate, and a different mental load. This is where a single system pays for itself: every schedule tracked on its own terms, every month-end number computed on the same principle, one screen to settle them all. If some of those staff work at a second property or your parents' place, the multi-home guide covers that arrangement too.