Nurses. CNAs. Hospital techs. Hotel, warehouse, and dispatch mamas. Your kids sleep tucked in at a mother's home nearby — and you pick up warm, fed, and happy in the morning.
Your babies sleep; you save lives.Your Momni keeps every penny of her care income. Momni never takes a cut.
Daycares close at six. Your shift starts at seven. Momni was built for exactly this gap — overnight care in a real mother's home, on your schedule.
Search mamas near you on the map (or near the hospital) who host overnights. Read what other mothers have shared, message her, meet her with the kids before your first shift.
Jammies on, teeth brushed, blankie packed. She does the bedtime story in her home while you clock in. Many night-shift mamas book the same rotation every week.
Scoop them up after handoff report — or arrange a late pickup so you can sleep first. You two set the rhythm. Pay her directly, mom to mom.
You spend the night caring for everyone else's families. A Momni spends it caring for yours — bedtime, midnight wake-ups, breakfast, the works. This isn't a babysitter staying late. It's a mother, in her home, doing what mothers do.
Book your whole rotation at once. Same Momni every Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday night — your kids' second bedtime routine.
Actual beds, actual bedtime, a calm house. Your kids wake up rested in a home, not a facility.
Post-shift sleep is sacred. Arrange a noon pickup and come get them after you've slept like a human being.
Dani is a single mama and an ER nurse on three twelves a week. For two years she pieced nights together — her mom one week, a teenager the next, a panicked group text the week after that.
Then she found Bree, a Momni eight minutes from the hospital whose own kids are early sleepers. Now Dani drops her boys off at 6:15 with their pillows and their dinosaur pajamas. Bree sends one photo around 8:30 — two sleeping boys — and Dani works her whole shift without checking her phone in a panic.
Morning pickup smells like pancakes. "She's not my backup plan anymore," Dani says. "She's my person."
More mamas tell it like this in Circle Stories — letters from the Circle, sister to sister.
Find your BreeA night-shift nurse in the Circle
The same way you'd come to trust a friend: meet her first, ask everything, see her home, start with one night, and decide for yourself. Momni is a community, not a childcare company — we don't vet, screen, or endorse anyone, and we won't pretend otherwise. What the Circle does is share openly: mamas post reviews from other mothers, and any background check a mama has purchased herself and chosen to display lives right on her profile. You choose your Momni. Always.
In your Momni's home — a real mother's house with real beds (or the pack-and-play and blankie you bring). You'll see the sleeping setup when you meet her, and you two work out the bedtime details together, mama to mama.
Yes — that's exactly what most night-shift mamas do. Book your rotation as a repeating schedule so the same Momni has your nights every week. Same house, same routine, kids who walk in like they live there.
You and your Momni agree on the rate together — overnight rates are between the two of you, and they're often far gentler than agency or facility pricing. Payment goes directly from you to her, mom to mom. Momni never touches care payments and never takes a percentage.
She's a mother — she knows. Mandatory overtime, a code at change of shift, a charting pile-up: text her and the kids have breakfast and cartoons until you get there. Build the what-ifs into your plan together up front, and the chaos stops being chaos.
There's a Momni near you — maybe near the hospital — whose porch light is on for your babies tonight.
Find care near youDifferent kind of night ahead? Find a Momni for date night, or book multi-day care for a trip.