- Background-checked caregivers
- Written care plan before any visit
- A care supervisor on every plan
- Incidents escalated within 24 hours
Who it is for
- First-time parents in the first 4–8 weeks
- Families without nearby relatives helping
- Mothers recovering from delivery
What is included
- Light household help so the home runs
- Meals + hydration for the parents
- Daytime supervision so mum can nap
- Infant comfort care under parent direction
- Daily log shared with the lead parent
What we do not do
- Medical postnatal care (use your midwife)
- Feeding decisions or breastfeeding clinical advice
Typical engagement
Usually 8–12 hours/day, 5–6 days/week, for 4–8 weeks.
Where we operate
New parent across 4 Nigerian cities.
Same care plan, same supervisor accountability, in every city we run. Switch to the Cities tab to see the neighbourhoods we cover.
4 cities live across Nigeria. Tap a pin to request care there.
Pricing
See package options
Silver, Gold, Platinum. The assessment recommends which one fits this service.
Compare packages
Related services
Other ways we support families.
Elderly care at home
Hands-on daily support for clients who need help with bathing, mobility, meals, and routines.
Learn more
Post-hospital recovery care
Non-medical recovery support after discharge - observation, mobility, meals, comfort.
Learn more
Companion care
Daytime company, conversation, and gentle activity for older adults who are still independent.
Learn more
Frequently asked questions
New parent: your questions answered.
The questions families ask most about new-parent support.
Is this a maternity nurse or midwife service?
No. This is non-medical home help: meals, light housework, daytime supervision so you can sleep, and gentle infant comfort care under your direction. Clinical postnatal care stays with your midwife.
Will the caregiver mind the baby so I can rest?
Yes. Daytime supervision and infant comfort care under your direction are central, so the new mother can nap and recover while the home keeps running smoothly.
Do you give feeding or breastfeeding advice?
No. Feeding decisions and any clinical advice stay with your midwife or doctor. We support the practical routine around whatever you decide is right for your baby.
How long do families usually book for?
Typically the first four to eight weeks, around 8 to 12 hours a day, five to six days a week, when an extra pair of hands matters most. You set the pattern that fits your household.
Non-medical scope
Cleaneet caregivers do not provide nursing, prescribing, injections, IV, oxygen, wound dressing, catheter changes, restraint, diagnosis, or clinical decision-making. Medication is reminders only.
