Financial independence rarely arrives with a parade. For many people, it shows up on a Tuesday morning when someone else is scrubbing the bathroom. Hiring a cleaning service is a luxury many retirees and busy professionals buy, not just because they hate cleaning, but because it converts money into time. A housekeeper does more than clean a home. They return hours that can be spent with family, pursuing hobbies, traveling, volunteering, or simply enjoying retirement. This article calculates how much capital it takes to fund that freedom indefinitely without touching principal.
Things to Consider Before Hiring a Housekeeper
If you’ve never spent money on domestic help, here are a few things to consider:
- How much service do you need? Some people hire a cleaning service only a few times a year for deep cleaning. Others find that twice-monthly visits handle the most unpleasant chores without the cost of weekly service.
- Are you comfortable with the arrangement? Trust, privacy, scheduling, pets, and securing valuables are all worth considering. Check references and ask questions until you’re comfortable inviting someone into your home.
- What are you giving up? Money spent on housekeeping could instead fund travel, charitable giving, healthcare, or additional investing. Compare the cost of outsourcing housework against your other priorities.
- How will you use the extra time? The value comes from what replaces the chores, whether that’s family time, hobbies, exercise, volunteering, travel, or simply getting more rest. If the freed-up hours disappear into mindless scrolling and television, well, consider picking up a broom yourself instead.
Three Service Tiers, Four Yield Levels
Price the service before sizing the portfolio. Three realistic tiers cover most households:
- Light service (twice-monthly cleaning): roughly $3,000 per year.
- Moderate service (weekly cleaning): roughly $6,000 per year.
- Premium service (weekly cleaning plus periodic deep cleans): roughly $12,000 per year.
Divide the annual cost by the yield to get the capital required.
| Service | 3.5% yield | 5% yield | 7% yield | 10% yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light ($3K) | $85,700 | $60,000 | $42,900 | $30,000 |
| Moderate ($6K) | $171,400 | $120,000 | $85,700 | $60,000 |
| Premium ($12K) | $342,900 | $240,000 | $171,400 | $120,000 |
The 10-year Treasury is near 4.5%, so anything below that is paying you less than risk-free money. That is your reference point.
Where Each Tier of Yield Lives
Conservative (3% to 4%), dividend-growth equities and utilities. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ | JNJ Price Prediction) yields about 2.2% at $228 with 64 consecutive years of increases. Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) yields roughly 2.8% and just logged its 70th consecutive annual hike. NextEra Energy yields near 2.7% and guides about 10% dividend growth through 2026, then 6% through 2028. Broad dividend-growth ETFs and investment-grade bonds round out this bucket.
Moderate (5% to 7%), REITs, preferred shares, high-dividend equity funds. Realty Income (NYSE:O) trades at $60 with a 5.2% yield, paying $0.2705 monthly against 114 consecutive quarterly increases. Vanguard’s REIT index and the iShares preferred index sit in similar yield territory. Dividend growth slows here; inflation protection thins.
Aggressive (8% to 14%), BDCs, mortgage REITs, high-yield credit. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) pays a $0.26 monthly dividend plus a $0.30 quarterly supplemental, running near 6% on regulars and into the 8%+ range with supplementals. OneMain Holdings yields about 7.3%, but its net charge-off ratio ran about 8% in Q1, which is exactly the credit-cycle risk you absorb to get the coupon.
The Compounding Tradeoff Most Income Investors Miss
Compare two portfolios sized to cover weekly cleaning today.
Portfolio A: $171,400 yielding 3.5% with 7% annual dividend growth. Year one income: $6,000. Year ten: about $11,800. Year twenty: about $23,200. By year ten the same portfolio is paying for the housekeeper and the lawn service.
Portfolio B: $60,000 yielding 10% with no growth. Year one income: $6,000. Year twenty: still $6,000, against a CPI that has been climbing steadily to 334. The cleaner’s invoice will not be.
When This Is the Wrong Use of Income
If your withdrawal rate is already stretched, $6,000 a year is a real hole in the budget. If you genuinely enjoy housework or find the activity physically beneficial, the math changes. If you are still funding children, healthcare premiums, long-term care reserves, or other major priorities, those expenses should usually come first. And if paying for a housekeeper requires working extra hours at a job you dislike, it may be worth asking whether buying back time is actually improving your life or simply creating a different obligation.
Three Things to Do This Week
- Call two local services and price your actual square footage and frequency. Many readers discover they need closer to $3,000 a year than $12,000.
- Pull a 10-year total return comparison of a dividend-growth name like P&G against a high-yield BDC like Main Street. The compounding gap is the story.
- Run the tax map. Realty Income and Main Street distributions are largely ordinary income; qualified dividends from JNJ, P&G, and NextEra are taxed at preferential rates, which can shift the after-tax winner by an entire tier.