How to Become a Maternity Nurse in the UK: A Step-by-Step Guide

Quick answer: There is no single legally required route into maternity nursing, but most people follow the same practical path: specialist training, the right practical essentials (DBS, insurance, first aid), strong references, and registration with agencies. This guide covers each step in detail.

About this guide
Written by the Babyem team. We have been training maternity nurses since 2010 and run a dedicated newborn placement scheme, supporting graduates to gain real experience.Our maternity nurse training is accredited at Level 3 and Level 4 by Open College Network (OCN), the largest vocational awarding body in the UK, Ofqual-recognised.

If you are a nanny, nursery nurse, childcare, or healthcare professional thinking about becoming a maternity nurse, or if you are someone who has had your own children and wants to turn that experience into a career, this is the guide for you.

What does a maternity nurse actually do?

A maternity nurse provides practical, non-medical newborn and postnatal support in the family home, typically during the first 0–3 months after birth. But the role is broader than most people expect before they start.

You may also see this role described as a maternity practitioner, newborn care specialist, baby nurse or occasionally baby nanny. In some countries, particularly the US, newborn care specialist is the more common term. In the UK, maternity nurse has remained the most widely used and recognised title, and is the term agencies and families use when searching for and hiring practitioners.

At Babyem, we describe the role this way: a maternity nurse is a nurturer. They are there for the mother, for the baby, and for the whole family. It is about supporting that family coming home from hospital, helping everybody settle in, building their confidence, and leaving them feeling more capable than when you arrived.

In practice, the role involves three distinct types of support:

  • Practical support newborn care, feeding routines, bathing, winding, settling, safe sleep foundations, gentle routines, nursery duties
  • Informational support helping parents understand newborn cues, types of formula, products, safe sleep guidelines, development and knowing when to refer to a midwife, health visitor or GP rather than advising beyond your scope
  • Emotional support reassuring exhausted parents, building their confidence, recognising when a mother may be struggling and knowing when to signpost professional support

Importantly, the role is also a teaching role. The goal is not to take over but to empower parents to feel confident caring for their baby when you leave. That distinction shapes everything about how a good maternity nurse works.

For a full breakdown of how a maternity nurse differs from a midwife and a maternity support worker, read Maternity Nurse vs Midwife vs Maternity Support Worker: What’s the Difference?

Understanding the different working arrangements

Before choosing training or registering with agencies, it helps to understand how maternity nurse work is actually structured. There are three main formats:

Type Hours Typical arrangement Best suited for
24-hour Full day and night, usually 5–6 days per week Live-in with the family for the placement duration Newborn period, intensive support, higher earnings
Nights only Typically 10pm–7am Daily or live-in by arrangement Families who need overnight cover but manage daytime independently
Days only Typically 8am–8pm Daily Families where a parent covers nights or where daytime support is the priority

Most families book a maternity nurse on a 24-hour, live-in basis for the duration of the placement. A standard working week runs five or six days, with one full day off. Continuous seven-day cover is not sustainable long-term and most experienced practitioners do not accept it. Your rest matters because your quality of care depends on it. You are also entitled to paid breaks within each 24-hour period, typically two to three hours, which you can use as you need.

Placements typically run for four to eight weeks, though some families book longer, particularly with twins or where they want continuity through the early months. Back-to-back placements become common once your reputation builds.

Is maternity nursing the right career for you?

Maternity nursing suits a specific type of person. Before committing to training, it is worth being honest with yourself about whether the reality of the role fits your life and your temperament.

You are likely a strong fit if you:

  • genuinely love the newborn stage and find it energising rather than draining
  • are comfortable working intensively in someone else’s home for weeks at a time
  • are a natural nurturer who also understands the importance of professional boundaries
  • can maintain a calm, reassuring presence with exhausted, emotional parents at 3am
  • are self-employed and comfortable managing your own bookings, contracts and income
  • want flexible, placement-based work rather than a fixed employed role

The professional boundaries point matters more than most people expect. You are not the mother's friend. You are a professional she has brought in to help and support her. You can be warm, caring and genuinely interested in her family, and that is exactly what makes the best maternity nurses. But there is a line. Your personal life is not part of the arrangement. Previous clients are confidential. You are there to do a job, and doing it well means holding that distinction clearly, even when families feel close. This is a skill every new maternity nurse has to develop, and the sooner you internalise it the better your placements will go.

Step 1: Complete specialist maternity nurse training

There is no single legally mandatory qualification to become a maternity nurse in the UK. However, families and agencies will look for evidence of training, and the quality and credibility of that training will directly affect which roles you are put forward for and what rate you can command.

What to look for in a maternity nurse training course:

  • evidence-based curriculum covering newborn care, feeding, safe sleep, settling, colic, reflux and postnatal recovery
  • responsive and attachment-informed practice, not just routines and schedules
  • safeguarding, professional boundaries and scope of practice
  • consultation skills: how to work with families, not just how to care for babies
  • recognised accreditation, not just a CPD certificate
  • tutor support and ideally some practical or case-based learning

 

Babyem offers Level 3 and Level 4 maternity nurse training, both accredited by Open College Network (OCN). Both levels are available as online maternity nurse training (fully self-paced) or as London blended maternity nurse training (online learning combined with two in-person training days in London). Choose based on how you learn best and what fits your schedule.

How to evaluate any maternity nurse training course

There are three questions that most guides do not tell you to ask.

1. Who actually created and delivers the training, and what are their credentials in this specific area?

A course written or delivered by someone whose background is in early years education or general childcare is a different thing from one created by a Lactation Consultant who has worked clinically with newborns, a sleep specialist with peer-reviewed research in infant sleep, or a physiotherapist with expertise in postnatal recovery. Ask who wrote the curriculum, what their background is, and whether they still work in the field or are teaching from older experience.

Babyem's maternity nurse training is delivered by a multi-disciplinary team of specialists, including lactation consultants, a pelvic floor physiotherapist, a clinical psychologist, a tongue-tie specialist, sleep specialists and infant feeding experts. These are not generalist educators. They are specialists who are still doing the work. What they teach is current because they are current.

2. What ongoing support and community does the training offer after you qualify?

Maternity nursing is self-employed, solo work. You arrive at a family's home on your own, work largely unseen, and leave when the placement ends. There is no team around you, no manager to call, no senior colleague in the next room.

This makes the community and ongoing support your training provides genuinely important, not a nice-to-have. When you encounter a feeding situation you have not seen before, or a baby whose pattern is not responding the way you expected, or a mother who is struggling in ways that feel outside your scope, who do you call?

Ask any training provider specifically what ongoing support looks like after you complete the course.

Babyem graduates have access to ongoing quarterly Q&A sessions with industry specialists, a private community of trained maternity nurses from across the UK and internationally, and, for England-based graduates, the Babyem placement scheme to help build real newborn experience with families.

Support does not stop when training does. That continuity is what makes the difference between a practitioner who grows in confidence quickly and one who figures it out alone.

3. What is the training's approach, and does it match yours?

This question is the one almost nobody asks before choosing training. It matters more than most people realise.

There is a significant difference between maternity nurse training built around prescriptive routines and schedules and training built around responsive, evidence-based, family-led practice. Many people drawn to this work have a naturally gentle, responsive approach. You need training that reflects and deepens that, not one that pulls in a different direction.

When your training aligns with your values, something useful happens: you work with more confidence, you communicate more clearly with families, and you attract the placements that suit you best. One of our graduates told us that learning to be clear about her approach from the very first conversation and finding families who shared it transformed her experience of the role. The right fit makes every placement better for everyone.

You can read more about how one of our graduates navigated this in her story.

Step 2: Get the practical essentials in place

Before registering with agencies or applying for roles, you need four things in place. These are non-negotiable requirements for most placements.

  • Enhanced DBS check — apply through the DBS update service to keep it current. Agencies and families will ask for it.
  • Paediatric first aid certificate — must be current. Agencies check the expiry date.
  • Professional indemnity and public liability insurance — as a self-employed practitioner working in clients' homes and giving professional guidance, you need both. Morton Michel and Nanny Insure both offer combined policies designed for maternity nurses.

Get all four in place before you start approaching agencies. Arriving on a call without them ready slows the registration process and signals a lack of preparation.

Step 3: Build your CV and references

Your CV is the single most important tool in your maternity nursing career, particularly in the early stages. Agencies are specific about what they look for.

What agencies look for in a maternity nurse CV:

  • Clearly listed ages of babies for each role , a CV that says ‘nanny’ without specifying whether the babies were newborns or toddlers is not useful to an agency
  • Dates of each placement gaps are noticed and will be asked about
  • Type of role 24-hour, nights, days, live-in, daily; single baby or twins
  • Any specialist experience twins, premature babies, feeding challenges, unsettled babies, families with older siblings
  • Training and qualifications listed clearly with provider names and accreditation level
  • Insurance, DBS and first aid noted with expiry dates

On references: most agencies conduct verbal reference checks. They will call your previous clients, not just accept written references. This means the quality of your working relationships matters enormously. If a previous client would not speak warmly about you on the phone to an agency, that placement will not support your registration regardless of what is written down. Aim for at least two strong verbal references covering your most recent baby-related work.

If you are newer to newborn care and your references are mainly from older-child nannying or childcare roles, be upfront about that. Some agencies, will place you with second or third-time families specifically to help you build newborn references at an appropriate rate, rather than holding you back entirely until you have them.

Step 4: Register with agencies and find your first role

Work comes through three main channels: specialist agencies, online platforms such as childcare.co.uk, and word of mouth. Agencies are the most reliable starting point because they handle the introduction, verify both parties and manage the professional conversation around rates and expectations. The better your training and the stronger your references, the more confidently an agency can put you forward.

This is where Babyem's placement scheme (for candidates based in England) makes a practical difference. Rather than leaving graduates to find their first families independently, the scheme supports you to gain structured experience, building the kind of references that get you registered with agencies faster and put forward for better roles sooner.

Over time, word of mouth becomes the most powerful channel. Baby massage groups, antenatal classes, local nurseries and professional connections like lactation consultants and doulas all generate referrals. But that network takes time to build, and it builds fastest from a foundation of quality training and strong early placements.

A note on rates

Maternity nursing is self-employed work. You set your own rate, and the market reflects your experience, qualifications, location and specialism. Agencies do not take a cut of your earnings. They charge the client a separate placement fee, and they will advise you on where your CV places you in the current market when you register with them.  As a guide, UK agencies as of June 2026 are typically quoting newly qualified practitioners in the region of £200-£250 per 24-hour day, with experienced practitioners in the £300-£450 range. Twins, multiples and specialist cases command higher rates. These figures move with the market, so for the most current picture it is worth checking directly with agencies when you are ready to register. Your rate will naturally grow as your newborn references and experience build.

For a full breakdown of earnings at different experience levels, read our companion guide: How Much Do Maternity Nurses Earn in the UK?

Step 5: Build the professional skills that determine long-term success

Training prepares you with the clinical knowledge. Practical experience builds your confidence. But the maternity nurses who build the strongest reputations and most consistent work are also those who master a set of professional skills that no course alone can manufacture.

  • Communication , from the initial phone call to the final handover, how you communicate with families shapes everything. Return messages promptly. Ask the right questions at interview. Check in regularly during a placement. In our experience at Babyem, the vast majority of problems that arise in placements come down to a breakdown in communication somewhere. The families who describe their maternity nurse as exceptional almost always mention how well she communicated, not just how good she was with the baby.
  • Professional boundaries warmth and professionalism are not opposites. You can be caring, interested and supportive while remaining the professional rather than the friend. This is a skill, not a personality type, and it is learnable.
  • Confidentiality previous clients are never discussed with current clients. Their home, their family dynamics and their personal circumstances are private. Families will quietly wonder whether you will discuss them with future clients, and the best way to reassure them is to demonstrate discretion consistently.
  • Knowing your scope if a parent asks a medical question, the right answer is to refer to their midwife or GP, not to guess or to Google it in front of them. Saying ‘I’m not sure, let’s find out together’ builds more trust than an uncertain answer.
  • Knowing your approach and being honest about it no two families are the same. Cultural practices, feeding choices, family dynamics and parenting styles all vary enormously. The most successful placements happen when a maternity nurse is clear about her approach from the beginning and works with families who are genuinely aligned with it. This is not about being rigid, it is about being honest so that both parties can do their best work together.

Step 6: Continue developing your practice

The maternity nurses who sustain the most successful long-term careers are those who keep learning. Specialist areas that clients and agencies consistently look for include:

Babyem offers specialist short courses in several of these areas alongside its core maternity nurse training programmes.

Can you become a maternity nurse as a career changer?

Yes, and more people do it than you might expect. Maternity nurses come from nannying, midwifery, health visiting and nursery practice. But they also come from teaching, pharmacy, corporate roles and backgrounds with no professional childcare experience at all.

The qualities that matter most — empathy, calm under pressure, discretion, and a genuine love of the newborn period- are not exclusive to any particular background. Many career changers find that their previous professional life gives them skills that translate unexpectedly well.

Gaye is a good example. She spent over 20 years in international corporate roles, left with no professional childcare background, built her experience gradually, completed Level 3 maternity nurse training, and is now one of the most in-demand international maternity nurses working today, 12 years on and still fully booked.

Read Gaye’s story: From Corporate Career to Maternity Nurse what the transition looked like in practice, the mistakes she made early on, and what she’d tell anyone considering the same path.

Common mistakes when starting out

Most of these come from experienced practitioners reflecting on what they wish they’d done differently.

  • Overstating your experience at the interview. Agencies talk to each other. A CV that exaggerates newborn experience will be exposed on the first placement and damage your reputation before it has had a chance to build. Start honestly, start at the right rate, and let your references grow naturally.
  • Not having a signed contract and deposit before starting. Families cancel. Babies arrive early. Plans change. Without paperwork in place before you arrive, you have no financial protection. Sort it before the placement begins, not after.
  • Working seven days a week when you’re new. Maternity nursing is physically and emotionally intense. A sustainable schedule from the start is better for you and for the families you work with.
  • Taking bookings with families whose values don’t match yours. Early in your career, the temptation is to accept every enquiry. But a placement with a family whose expectations fundamentally conflict with your approach will leave you burned out and them disappointed. Learning to screen kindly and professionally from the first conversation is worth developing early.
  • Underpricing yourself and then struggling to raise rates. Starting too low signals inexperience rather than value, and is very hard to correct with existing clients. Take agency advice on appropriate rates for your experience level and raise them systematically as your CV grows.

Your next step

If this guide has helped you think through what the role involves and whether it might be right for you, the most useful next step is to download the free tip sheet.

Interested in becoming a Maternity Nurse?

Download this FREE tip sheet and find out what you need to consider before getting started.

Download the Free Guide

When you are ready to explore training, you can find full details of our Online Maternity Nurse Training and London Blended Maternity Nurse Training on our course pages.

FAQs

Do I need to be a nurse or midwife to become a maternity nurse?

No. Despite the title, maternity nursing is not a clinical healthcare role. You do not need a nursing or midwifery qualification. People enter the profession from nannying, doula work, nursery practice, health visiting, adult care and many other backgrounds , as well as directly from personal experience with babies and families.

How long does it take to become a maternity nurse?

The training itself typically takes a few months depending on the programme and how many hours a week you study. After qualifying, most people need several months to get their practical essentials in place, register with agencies and secure their first placements. A realistic timeline from starting training to working consistently is around 6–12 months.

How much do maternity nurses earn in the UK?

Rates reflect your experience, qualifications, location and specialism, and move with the market. As a guide, UK agencies as of June 2026 are typically quoting newly qualified practitioners in the £200-£250 per 24-hour day range, with experienced practitioners in the £300-£450 range. Twins and specialist cases command higher rates. For the most current figures, check directly with specialist agencies when you are ready to register.

Do I need to be in London to become a maternity nurse?

No. Maternity nurses work across the UK and internationally. London and the South East have the highest concentration of private families, but agencies place practitioners nationally and many clients also seek maternity nurses for overseas placements.

What is the difference between a maternity nurse and a maternity nanny?

A maternity nurse typically has specialist newborn training and supports families during the 0–3 month period, often 24 hours. A maternity nanny may have a more general childcare background and often supports slightly older babies, typically in a daily rather than live-in arrangement. Agencies use both terms and the distinction can vary.

What is the difference between Level 3 and Level 4 maternity nurse training with Babyem?

Both the online and face to face maternity nurse training courses cover the same core content. Level 4 has 4 additional modules.

In regard to the post-course assessment: Level 3 is assessed at A-level standard and Level 4 at foundation degree standard. If you are newer to working with babies, Level 3 is a natural starting point. If you already have solid baby experience and want your qualification to reflect a higher assessment standard, Level 4 is the appropriate choice. If you are unsure, our team can talk it through with you when you enquire.

Can I become a maternity nurse if I am transitioning from adult or elderly care?

Yes. The core caregiving skills, patience, attentiveness, calm under pressure, sensitivity to vulnerability, transfer directly. You will need training in newborn care and postnatal support, but your existing caregiving foundation is a genuine asset.

What agencies should I register with?

There are a number of UK agencies placing maternity nurses, including Eden Nannies. Register with more than one. Agencies do not expect exclusivity and spreading your registration increases your chances of consistent work. Most agencies require you to have newborn experience, which is where the Babyem newborn placement scheme helps many candidates gain the confidence, experience and references needed.

In summary

Becoming a maternity nurse in the UK involves six key steps: specialist training, getting the practical essentials in place, building a strong CV and references, registering with agencies, developing the professional skills that sustain a career, and continuing to learn.

There is no single mandatory route and no regulated profession to qualify for. But the families and agencies who matter increasingly expect evidence of quality training, professional credibility and the personal qualities to work sensitively inside a family home at one of the most intense moments of their lives.

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