Making Money as a Parenting Coach: What is the Range for a Parent Coach Salary?

Mike Allen • July 13, 2023
Making Money as a Parenting Coach: What is the Range for a Parent Coach Salary?

The burning questions on the minds of many aspiring parenting coaches are: Can I actually make money as a parenting coach? What is a typical parenting coach salary?



Whether you're considering getting certified through The Jai Institute for Parenting or any other program, let's explore the exciting possibilities together!


What is a Typical Parenting Coach Salary?

The fees you set after obtaining your parent coach certification will differ from those you establish once you have gained more experience.


Different locations and markets also mean different rates. Naturally, if you decide to provide parent coaching services to local clients in Los Angeles, your fees are likely to differ from those you would charge if you were operating in rural Ohio.


One of the greatest advantages of this business is that you have an ability to work remotely from anywhere, so your options are not limited to local clients!


The following pricing approaches serve as guidelines rather than strict rules. For instance, coaches transitioning from established professional fields with a well-known reputation may start their pricing at a higher level than newcomers who are still building their reputation.


Certain parent coaches possess additional professional qualifications before entering the field. They might be pediatricians, early childhood educators, psychologists, teachers, therapists, doulas, or social workers. For others, completing the parenting coach certification may be the first foray into this area of work.


Your initial parent coaching salary is likely to vary based on your existing confidence, experience, and networks—and your rates will continue to evolve as you progress.


The most common starting point for our coaches involves offering individual sessions. At the higher end, some of our coaches charge up to $3500 USD for our 12-week transformative peaceful parenting program. 


Coaches in different markets offer this coaching package at a lower price to align with the local economy and their target clientele. On average, a range between $1200 and $2400 for a 12-week program (typically consisting of a weekly one-hour session) is the most common. Opting for an online parent coaching business will grant you greater flexibility in setting your rates in certain cases.


Building a Parent Coaching Business and

Making a Difference

Being a parenting coach is not just about pursuing your passion—it's about running a viable business that pays the bills and gives you the freedom and flexibility you want so you can spend time with your family. 


At The Jai Institute, we understand this reality. With your certification, a genuine love for what you do, and the desire to connect with people who need your services, you have everything you need to make money as a parenting coach and create a fulfilling lifestyle for you and your family. The thing that makes a business viable is its ability to deliver on its promises to its customers.


We understand that the thought of running a business can seem overwhelming. That’s why we offer four weeks of business coaching at the end of our seven-month parent coach certification program. Business doesn’t need to be complicated. The key is to know what you do (and don’t) need to get started. 


The Simplicity of Business

Now, let's break it down. At its core, having a business is simple. You provide a valuable service, and in return, you receive monetary compensation. 


As a parenting coach, you possess the solution to a widespread challenge—one that already has people waking up at 3:00 am wondering how they will ever solve it. Many parents are desperately grappling with their relationships with their children, wanting things to be different than they are and not knowing how to make that a reality. 


That’s where you come in!


Parent coaches have the tools and expertise to guide parents on the incredible journey of reimagining and recreating the kind of connection and cooperation they long for with their children. That’s why parents everywhere are more than willing to compensate parent coaches for their knowledge and support.


Monetizing Your Passion

Parenting might seem like the most natural thing in the world to you. It might seem odd to get paid to do something you love, but making money as a parenting coach is something you can do, and it can give you the lifestyle you want. With the number of families out there looking to change their family relationships and the way they are parenting, making a living as a parenting coach is a very real opportunity. Many of our parent coaching graduates are supporting their families, changing careers, or re-entering the workforce by starting their own businesses as successful parent coaches.


There's a significant demand for professionals like you who can bridge the gap between how parents would like things to be and what they are currently experiencing in their homes. Helping families thrive is not only a desirable service to offer, but it’s also unbelievably fulfilling. 


Like any other venture, it requires dedication, work, and getting the word out about your services. Parent coaching is a valuable area of expertise that positively impacts families' lives. Your dedication and a sprinkle of marketing magic will help you reach out to parents in need, showcase your skills, and make a real difference while building a thriving coaching business.


The Jai Institute: Empowering You on Your Journey   

Jai’s team of Master Trainers is here to empower you in achieving your parenting and business goals. Whether it's equipping you with the necessary skills to become a certified parenting coach or assisting you in understanding how you can market your services to build your own coaching business, the possibilities are truly limitless.

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By Maggie Pouplis June 3, 2026
Almost every parent experiences this more than once. Your child changes, and suddenly, you feel like you no longer fully understand them. The toddler who melts down over the “wrong” cup. The once easygoing school-aged child who suddenly becomes more sensitive, withdrawn, or reactive. The teenager who pulls away just when you feel the strongest urge to protect them. And somewhere in those moments, most parents begin searching for explanations. “Something changed.” “Someone is influencing them.” “They’ve become difficult.” “Social media is ruining this generation.” As parents, we naturally try to make sense of behavior. We look for causes because uncertainty feels uncomfortable, especially when it involves someone we love so deeply. But many times, what changes first is not the child’s character. It is the child’s developing brain. One of the most important things I learned during my training with the Jai Institute for Parenting was that behavior cannot be fully understood outside the context of relationship, nervous system development, and emotional safety. That perspective stayed with me and eventually led me to dive even deeper into developmental neuroscience and brain development. Because once you begin to understand how the brain develops, it stops looking like defiance, manipulation, laziness, or attitude. The behavior begins to look like development. In the early years of life, especially between ages two and four, children experience emotions intensely while still lacking the neurological maturity to regulate them independently. The areas of the brain responsible for impulse control, emotional regulation, planning, and perspective taking are still under construction. In other words, young children often feel enormous emotions inside very small nervous systems. This is why a toddler can completely fall apart because their banana broke in half or because you gave them the “wrong” spoon. To the adult brain, the reaction may seem dramatic. To the child’s nervous system, however, the distress is real. This does not mean children should grow up without boundaries . It means that in moments of emotional flooding, connection and regulation often need to come before teaching. As Dr. Daniel Siegel often explains, an overwhelmed brain cannot effectively access logic, learning, or problem-solving. The nervous system must first return to a state of safety before true learning can happen. This is where co-regulation becomes incredibly important. Children borrow our nervous systems long before they can consistently regulate themselves. They learn emotional regulation through repeated relational experiences with calm, connected adults. Of course, this does not mean parents must remain perfectly calm all the time. Parents are human beings with limits, stress, exhaustion, responsibilities, and their own nervous systems. What matters most is not perfection but repair, awareness, and the overall emotional climate of the relationship. As children move into the school-age years, something else begins to happen. Around ages five to seven, the social brain expands significantly. Children become increasingly aware of how others see them. Acceptance, belonging, comparison, fairness, and peer relationships begin carrying much more emotional weight. This is often the age when parents say things like: “They suddenly became more sensitive.” “They take everything personally now.” “They worry more than before.” And they are usually right. At this stage, children are not simply reacting emotionally. They are beginning to build a deeper social identity. Their brains are becoming more aware of social evaluation and emotional meaning within relationships. Then comes a stage I personally believe is one of the most misunderstood of all: roughly ages eight to ten. Many parents expect things to stabilize by this point. Instead, some children become quieter, more introspective, more emotionally reactive, or seemingly disconnected. Others become easily bored, frustrated, or emotionally overwhelmed. And naturally, adults begin creating narratives around those changes. “They’re lazy.” “They’ve changed.” “They don’t care anymore.” But very often, what we are witnessing is neurological reorganization rather than deterioration. During this period, the brain begins a major process called synaptic pruning. Neural connections that are not frequently used begin to weaken, while frequently used pathways become stronger and more efficient. At the same time, children develop more complex emotional awareness, deeper thinking, and a richer internal world. Many children at this age begin asking bigger questions about themselves, relationships, fairness, identity, and belonging, even if they cannot fully articulate those thoughts yet. Sometimes what adults interpret as withdrawal is actually cognitive and emotional expansion happening internally. And then adolescence arrives, perhaps the stage that activates the most fear in parents. Teenagers begin separating psychologically from their parents as part of healthy development. Their need for autonomy increases while the emotional and reward systems of the brain become highly sensitive. Peer relationships become deeply important, emotions intensify, and risk-taking often increases. To many parents, this can feel frightening or even personal. But adolescence is not a broken relationship. It is a developmental transition. Teenagers still need boundaries, guidance, and emotional safety. Perhaps more than ever. But they also need space to develop identity, autonomy, and a sense of self outside the parent-child dynamic. And maybe this is one of the biggest challenges of parenting today: learning how to remain emotionally available without trying to control every stage of development out of fear. Modern parenting often places enormous pressure on parents to react perfectly at every moment. But children do not need perfect parents. They need regulated enough adults who are willing to stay curious about what behavior may actually be communicating. Because many times, children are not trying to give us a hard time. They are trying to organize a developing brain and nervous system inside a very overstimulating world. And perhaps the question we need to ask more often is not “How do I stop this behavior?” , but “What might this developing brain be trying to communicate through it?”
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By Maggie Pouplis June 3, 2026
Almost every parent experiences this more than once. Your child changes, and suddenly, you feel like you no longer fully understand them. The toddler who melts down over the “wrong” cup. The once easygoing school-aged child who suddenly becomes more sensitive, withdrawn, or reactive. The teenager who pulls away just when you feel the strongest urge to protect them. And somewhere in those moments, most parents begin searching for explanations. “Something changed.” “Someone is influencing them.” “They’ve become difficult.” “Social media is ruining this generation.” As parents, we naturally try to make sense of behavior. We look for causes because uncertainty feels uncomfortable, especially when it involves someone we love so deeply. But many times, what changes first is not the child’s character. It is the child’s developing brain. One of the most important things I learned during my training with the Jai Institute for Parenting was that behavior cannot be fully understood outside the context of relationship, nervous system development, and emotional safety. That perspective stayed with me and eventually led me to dive even deeper into developmental neuroscience and brain development. Because once you begin to understand how the brain develops, it stops looking like defiance, manipulation, laziness, or attitude. The behavior begins to look like development. In the early years of life, especially between ages two and four, children experience emotions intensely while still lacking the neurological maturity to regulate them independently. The areas of the brain responsible for impulse control, emotional regulation, planning, and perspective taking are still under construction. In other words, young children often feel enormous emotions inside very small nervous systems. This is why a toddler can completely fall apart because their banana broke in half or because you gave them the “wrong” spoon. To the adult brain, the reaction may seem dramatic. To the child’s nervous system, however, the distress is real. This does not mean children should grow up without boundaries . It means that in moments of emotional flooding, connection and regulation often need to come before teaching. As Dr. Daniel Siegel often explains, an overwhelmed brain cannot effectively access logic, learning, or problem-solving. The nervous system must first return to a state of safety before true learning can happen. This is where co-regulation becomes incredibly important. Children borrow our nervous systems long before they can consistently regulate themselves. They learn emotional regulation through repeated relational experiences with calm, connected adults. Of course, this does not mean parents must remain perfectly calm all the time. Parents are human beings with limits, stress, exhaustion, responsibilities, and their own nervous systems. What matters most is not perfection but repair, awareness, and the overall emotional climate of the relationship. As children move into the school-age years, something else begins to happen. Around ages five to seven, the social brain expands significantly. Children become increasingly aware of how others see them. Acceptance, belonging, comparison, fairness, and peer relationships begin carrying much more emotional weight. This is often the age when parents say things like: “They suddenly became more sensitive.” “They take everything personally now.” “They worry more than before.” And they are usually right. At this stage, children are not simply reacting emotionally. They are beginning to build a deeper social identity. Their brains are becoming more aware of social evaluation and emotional meaning within relationships. Then comes a stage I personally believe is one of the most misunderstood of all: roughly ages eight to ten. Many parents expect things to stabilize by this point. Instead, some children become quieter, more introspective, more emotionally reactive, or seemingly disconnected. Others become easily bored, frustrated, or emotionally overwhelmed. And naturally, adults begin creating narratives around those changes. “They’re lazy.” “They’ve changed.” “They don’t care anymore.” But very often, what we are witnessing is neurological reorganization rather than deterioration. During this period, the brain begins a major process called synaptic pruning. Neural connections that are not frequently used begin to weaken, while frequently used pathways become stronger and more efficient. At the same time, children develop more complex emotional awareness, deeper thinking, and a richer internal world. Many children at this age begin asking bigger questions about themselves, relationships, fairness, identity, and belonging, even if they cannot fully articulate those thoughts yet. Sometimes what adults interpret as withdrawal is actually cognitive and emotional expansion happening internally. And then adolescence arrives, perhaps the stage that activates the most fear in parents. Teenagers begin separating psychologically from their parents as part of healthy development. Their need for autonomy increases while the emotional and reward systems of the brain become highly sensitive. Peer relationships become deeply important, emotions intensify, and risk-taking often increases. To many parents, this can feel frightening or even personal. But adolescence is not a broken relationship. It is a developmental transition. Teenagers still need boundaries, guidance, and emotional safety. Perhaps more than ever. But they also need space to develop identity, autonomy, and a sense of self outside the parent-child dynamic. And maybe this is one of the biggest challenges of parenting today: learning how to remain emotionally available without trying to control every stage of development out of fear. Modern parenting often places enormous pressure on parents to react perfectly at every moment. But children do not need perfect parents. They need regulated enough adults who are willing to stay curious about what behavior may actually be communicating. Because many times, children are not trying to give us a hard time. They are trying to organize a developing brain and nervous system inside a very overstimulating world. And perhaps the question we need to ask more often is not “How do I stop this behavior?” , but “What might this developing brain be trying to communicate through it?”
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Jaclyn Carlson: Why Burned-Out Working Mothers Are Turning Toward Coaching Careers
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Discover how Jaclyn Carlson transitioned from corporate burnout to meaningful work as a parenting coach, and why more mothers are turning to parent coaching for purpose, flexibility, and emotional impact.
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