Childcare Cost: The National Picture

Before diving into the details, here are the headline numbers every parent and financial planner should know:

$13,128
National Avg. Annual Cost (1 Child)
Center-based full-time care, all ages blended. Masks huge variation by age and care type.
Source: Child Care Aware of America, 2024
$24,243
Most Expensive: Washington D.C.
Annual infant center care cost. More than 4ร— the cost of in-state public college tuition.
Source: EPI / World Population Review, 2025
38 + DC
States Where Infant Care Exceeds College
Annual infant care cost exceeds in-state public college tuition in 38 states and D.C. โ€” up from 33 states pre-pandemic.
Source: Economic Policy Institute, March 2025
โ‰ค7%
HHS "Affordable" Threshold
The federal affordability benchmark for childcare as a share of family income. No state meets this standard for infant center care.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services

How Childcare Costs Change as Your Child Grows

Costs decline significantly as children age โ€” largely because caregiver-to-child ratios improve. Infants may require 1:3 ratios; preschoolers allow 1:8โ€“10. Below are national median costs by age group and care setting:

Age GroupCenter-Based
(Annual)
Center-Based
(Monthly)
Home-Based
(Annual)
Home-Based
(Monthly)
% of Median
Family Income
Infant (0โ€“12 mo.)$13,935$1,230$11,992$999~16.0%
Toddler (1โ€“2 yrs)$12,960$1,080$10,800$900~13โ€“15%
Preschool (3โ€“5 yrs)$11,040$920$9,600$800~10โ€“12%
School-Age (5โ€“12 yrs)$9,240$770$7,800$650~8โ€“10%

Sources: Center-based infant care: Child Care Aware of America (2024); HHS/ACF Market Rate Surveys (2025). Home-based estimates: DOL National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP), 2022 data. Monthly figures rounded. Income share: DOL Women's Bureau NDCP 2022. All figures represent national medians for full-time care.

Annual Center-Based Childcare Cost by Age Group

Source: Child Care Aware of America 2024; HHS/ACF Market Rate Surveys 2025; DOL NDCP 2022.

Which Type of Childcare Fits Your Budget?

The type of care you choose has a massive impact on your annual costs. Here's how the four most common options compare for infant care at the national level:

๐Ÿซ
Child Care Center
$1,230/mo
~$14,760/year for infant (national avg.)
Weekly (infant)$343
Weekly (4-year-old)~$262
Licensed & regulatedโœ… Yes
Sibling discount avg.~10%
๐Ÿก
Family Child Care Home
$999/mo
~$11,992/year for infant (national avg.)
Weekly (infant)~$220
Home environmentโœ… Yes
LicensedVaries by state
Mixed-age groupsCommon
๐Ÿ‘ด
Relative / Informal Care
$0โ€“$500/mo
Often free or low-cost; availability varies
LicensedโŒ No
Subsidy eligibleSometimes
ReliabilityVariable
Common arrangementGrandparents, siblings

Sources: Nanny weekly cost ($827/week) and cost increase (+8%): FinanceBuzz citing Care.com 2024 data. Center-based weekly infant cost ($343/week): Child Care Aware of America (2024). Family home-based annual cost ($11,992): DOL NDCP 2022. All figures represent national averages and vary significantly by location.

Annual Childcare Cost by State (2024)

Costs vary dramatically across the country. Below are annual center-based infant care costs for key states, ranked from most to least expensive:

RankStateAnnual Cost
(Infant, Center)
Monthly
Equiv.
% of Married
Couple Income
vs. National
Avg.
1Washington D.C.$24,243$2,020~19โ€“26%+85%
2Massachusetts$20,913$1,743~18โ€“22%+59%
3California$18,180$1,515~15%+38%
4Minnesota$17,160$1,430~13โ€“16%+31%
5New York$16,380$1,365~13โ€“15%+25%
6Vermont$16,380$1,365~14โ€“17%+25%
7New Mexico$15,600$1,300~21%+19%
โ€”National Average~$13,128$1,094~10%โ€”
44Arkansas$6,864$572~10โ€“11%โˆ’48%
45Louisiana$6,552$546~10%โˆ’50%
46South Dakota$6,468$539~9.4%โˆ’51%
47North Dakota$6,396$533~9โ€“11%โˆ’51%
48Kansas$6,132$511~10โ€“12%โˆ’53%
49New Jersey$5,940$495~10%โˆ’55%
50Mississippi$5,436$453~9โ€“10%โˆ’59%

Sources: Annual cost figures from Economic Policy Institute (2024โ€“2025 data in 2024 dollars), World Population Review (February 2025, citing EPI and DOL NDCP), and Child Care Aware of America 2024 Price of Care report. Income percentage from EPI and Child Care Aware affordability analysis.

Where Childcare Hits Families Hardest

The federal government defines childcare as "affordable" when it costs no more than 7% of family income. No state meets this standard for center-based infant care. Below are the states where the burden is greatest โ€” and smallest:

๐Ÿ”ด Least Affordable States

Infant center care as % of married-couple median income

  • 1. Washington D.C.~19โ€“26%
  • 2. Massachusetts~18โ€“22%
  • 3. New Mexico~21%
  • 4. California~15%
  • 5. Vermont~14โ€“17%
  • 6. Minnesota~13โ€“16%
  • 7. New York~13โ€“15%

๐ŸŸข Most Affordable States

Infant center care as % of married-couple median income

  • 1. South Dakota~9.4%
  • 2. Mississippi~9โ€“10%
  • 3. North Dakota~9โ€“11%
  • 4. Louisiana~10%
  • 5. New Jersey~10%
  • 6. Arkansas~10โ€“11%
  • 7. Kansas~10โ€“12%

Sources: EPI (2025), DOL NDCP, Child Care Aware of America (2024)

Single Parents Face the Steepest Climb: The national average childcare cost for one child represents 35% of single-parent median household income, compared to just 10% for married couples. In 45 states plus D.C., the average annual cost of care for two children in a center exceeded annual mortgage payments.
Source: Child Care Aware of America, 2024.

7 Ways to Reduce Your Childcare Bill

  • 01

    Use a Dependent Care FSA

    Contribute up to $5,000/year pre-tax through your employer. At a 25% federal rate, that saves $1,250 annually โ€” often more valuable than the child care tax credit alone. Must be elected during open enrollment.

  • 02

    Claim the Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit

    Claim 20โ€“35% of up to $3,000 in expenses (one child) or $6,000 (two+). Maximum credit is $1,050 per child. Can be combined with FSA on expenses above the FSA limit โ€” consult a tax professional to optimize both.

  • 03

    Apply for Child Care Subsidies (CCDF)

    The Child Care and Development Fund provides subsidies to eligible lower- and moderate-income families through state-administered vouchers. Eligibility varies by state. Only 3 states' subsidy rates fully cover average infant care costs (Hawaii, Indiana, and South Dakota).

  • 04

    Share Nanny Costs (Nanny Share)

    Splitting nanny costs with another family can cut per-family costs by 30โ€“50% while still providing high staff-to-child ratios. Especially cost-effective for two families with similar-aged children in the same neighborhood.

  • 05

    Ask About Sibling Discounts

    Many centers offer an average 10% discount for a second child. For families with two children in care, this can save $1,000โ€“$2,000 per year at a typical center. Always ask โ€” it's rarely advertised proactively.

  • 06

    Consider Family Care Homes

    Home-based family childcare typically costs 10โ€“20% less than center-based care per year, often with comparable quality. Look for providers licensed by your state for oversight and subsidy eligibility.

  • 07

    Check Employer Benefits

    Many employers offer dependent care FSAs, backup childcare reimbursements, or partnerships with childcare providers. Check your HR benefits package โ€” these perks are chronically underutilized by eligible employees.

Frequently Asked Questions

The national average cost of childcare for one child in 2024 was $13,128 per year, according to Child Care Aware of America. This is a blended average across care types. Center-based care averages about $14,760/year for infants specifically, while family home-based care averages around $11,992/year for infants. These averages mask enormous variation by state and county โ€” costs range from $5,436/year in Mississippi to $24,243/year in Washington D.C.
The primary driver is caregiver-to-child ratios. Most state licensing rules require roughly 1 caregiver per 3 infants, but permit 1 caregiver per 8โ€“10 preschoolers. Higher staffing ratios mean more labor cost per child, which translates directly into higher tuition rates. Infant care typically costs 15โ€“30% more than toddler care at the same facility, according to HHS/ACF Market Rate Surveys.
Childcare is not a deduction but may qualify for the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC). You can claim 20โ€“35% of up to $3,000 in qualifying expenses for one child (maximum $1,050 credit) or $6,000 for two or more children (maximum $2,100 credit). A Dependent Care FSA allows you to set aside up to $5,000 pre-tax per year through your employer, which is often more valuable at higher income levels. Consult a tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
Childcare prices rose 29% from 2020 to 2024, outpacing overall inflation by 7 percentage points over the same period, per Child Care Aware of America. The BLS Consumer Price Index for day care and preschool rose approximately 22% between January 2020 and September 2024. The COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath, combined with workforce shortages in the childcare sector, significantly accelerated price increases.
Yes. The annual cost of infant care exceeds in-state public college tuition in 38 states and Washington D.C., according to EPI's March 2025 analysis โ€” up from 33 states before the pandemic. In Washington D.C., infant care costs ($24,243) are more than four times the annual in-state college tuition. This comparison has become a widely-cited illustration of the severity of the childcare affordability crisis.
The primary federal program is the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF), which provides subsidies to eligible low- and moderate-income families through state-administered vouchers. Eligibility thresholds and benefit levels vary by state. As of 2024, subsidy rates fully covered the average cost of infant care in only three states: Hawaii, Indiana, and South Dakota. In half of all states, the gap between the subsidy rate and actual market cost exceeds $400/month. Visit your state's childcare agency website to check eligibility.

Sources & Methodology

  • U.S. Department of Labor โ€” National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP), 2022 (most recent county-level data available)
  • Child Care Awareยฎ of America โ€” Price of Care report (2024), based on January 2025 survey
  • Economic Policy Institute (EPI) โ€” State-level childcare cost fact sheets, March 2025 (2023 data in 2024 dollars)
  • U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey โ€” Median household and family income by state
  • HHS/ACF Child Care Market Rate Surveys โ€” Care-type monthly averages and subsidy rate comparisons
  • Bureau of Labor Statistics โ€” CPI-U (Child Care & Preschool) for inflation-adjusted comparisons
  • FinanceBuzz / Care.com โ€” Nanny cost data and care type weekly averages for 2024
  • World Population Review โ€” State childcare cost rankings, February 2025 (citing EPI and DOL NDCP)