The school bell can be a brutal timekeeper. You might have six decent working hours between drop-off and pick-up, then a jumble of clubs, dinner, uniforms and someone suddenly needing cardboard for tomorrow. Building a career around that rhythm isn’t about shrinking your ambitions. It’s about choosing work that fits the real shape of your week.
Start with the hours you can protect
Before changing jobs or starting something new, map a normal school week. Include the commute and pick-up, but also the awkward edges: inset days, dentist appointments, school plays, half-term cover and the 3.15pm message saying PE kit has gone missing.
This stops you applying for roles that look flexible but still expect you to be available at the worst times. A part-time job may still need late meetings. A freelance plan may sound free until every client wants a call at 4pm. Be clear about your real working windows.
Look for flexibility with detail
Flexible work can mean school hours, compressed hours, remote days, job-sharing, term-time contracts or self-employed work. The label matters less than the details. Can you start at 9.30am after drop-off? Can meetings avoid pick-up time? What happens during school holidays?
If you’re already employed, asking for flexible working is often better when you bring a clear plan rather than a vague request. Suggest the hours, explain how the work will be covered, and offer a review point so your employer can picture the arrangement.
Choose work that fits the rhythm
Some careers naturally suit school routines better than others. Teaching assistant roles, school admin, childminding, tutoring, bookkeeping, virtual assistant work, local cleaning rounds, care work and small online businesses can all offer a better match than a traditional full-time office role.
If caring for children is the part of family life that feels most meaningful, Fostering People can belong in your research too, especially if you’re weighing up work that centres on children’s routines, support networks and being available in the day. It’s not the same as fitting a job into spare hours, so it needs careful thought.
Build income in layers
A school-hours career often works best when it isn’t balanced on one fragile income stream. A parent might combine two mornings of bookkeeping with a Friday cleaning client. Someone else might tutor during term time and sell digital resources or crafts during quieter months.
Layering income gives you more room if a client leaves, a child is off sick, or school holidays reduce your hours. It also helps you test an idea without quitting paid work too soon.
Plan for holidays before they arrive
Term time can trick you into thinking your plan works perfectly. Then July arrives, clubs cost more than expected and relatives are away. Put holiday cover into your sums from the start, even if your answer is a mix of annual leave, swaps with other parents, grandparents and quieter work weeks.
If childcare costs are the barrier, check what help with childcare costs might apply before ruling out a role. The numbers can change depending on your child’s age, your income and the type of childcare you use.
Keep your skills visible
Working around children can sometimes make people talk as if your career is paused. Keep a simple record of what you’re learning, earning and delivering, whether that’s managing clients, completing training, running a home-based business or supporting a school community.
Update your CV with outcomes, not apologies. “Managed invoicing for three local businesses during school hours” sounds stronger than “worked part-time around childcare.” The first tells an employer or client what you can do.
A career built around school life may look different from the path you imagined before children, but different doesn’t mean smaller. Choose one step that fits this term, whether that’s asking about flexible hours, pricing a service, refreshing your CV or applying for one role that matches your school-day window.

