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Childcare Costs by State 2026: What Parents Actually Pay for Daycare, Pre-K, and Nannies

Childcare costs by state 2026: what parents actually pay for daycare, nannies, au pairs, and Pre-K. National averages range from $600/month to $3,200+/month depending on state and care type.

Published April 23, 2026Updated April 23, 2026
Childcare Costs by State 2026: What Parents Actually Pay for Daycare, Pre-K, and Nannies - Featured image

The average cost of full-time infant daycare in the US reached $1,200–$1,800/month in 2026, with costs in high-cost states like Massachusetts and California exceeding $2,500/month — more than the median monthly rent in many markets. This guide breaks down childcare costs by type (daycare center, family daycare, nanny, au pair, Pre-K) and by state tier so parents can set realistic budgets and understand what drives the regional variation.

How We Categorized Childcare Costs

We evaluated each childcare type across 4 dimensions:

Dimension Why It Matters
Cost Range by State Tier Regional variation is significant — up to 3x between cheapest and most expensive states
Age of Child Infant care costs 20–40% more than toddler/preschool care due to staffing ratios
Full-Time vs. Part-Time Part-time options (3 days/week) cost 50–70% of full-time but vary widely by provider
Quality Indicators Licensed, accredited centers cost more but have documented developmental outcomes

Data sources: Care.com 2026 Cost of Care Survey, National Database of Child Care Prices (NDCCP), Economic Policy Institute Childcare Cost Map, Child Care Aware of America.


1. Full-Time Daycare Center (Infant) — Most Common, Highest Regulated Cost

National Avg. Monthly Cost: $1,200–$2,100
High-Cost States (MA, CA, NY, DC, WA): $2,000–$3,200/month
Mid-Cost States (TX, FL, IL, GA): $1,100–$1,700/month
Low-Cost States (MS, AR, AL, SD): $600–$1,000/month

Licensed infant daycare centers operate under state staffing ratio requirements — typically 1:3 or 1:4 (caregiver to infant). This ratio is the primary driver of high infant care costs. Toddler (18 months–3 years) rates average 15–25% less; preschool (3–5 years) averages 20–35% less than infant rates at the same center.

Pros

  • Licensed centers offer consistent schedule, trained staff, and developmental curriculum
  • Regulated staff ratios provide documented safety standards
  • Group socialization for child developmental benefits

Cons

  • Highest monthly cost of non-nanny options
  • Waitlists for quality infant centers can be 6–18 months — enroll during pregnancy
  • Sick-child policies mean parents frequently miss work for exclusion days

Who This Is Best For

Working parents who need reliable 5-day coverage, value structured learning environments, and whose child is on a consistent schedule. Waitlist planning is critical — contact centers during pregnancy for priority consideration.


2. Family Home Daycare — Best Value for Infant and Toddler Care

National Avg. Monthly Cost: $800–$1,400
High-Cost States: $1,400–$2,000/month
Mid-Cost States: $700–$1,100/month
Low-Cost States: $400–$750/month

Family home daycares operate in a provider's home with smaller groups (typically 4–8 children). Licensing requirements vary significantly by state — 9 states do not require family home daycare providers to be licensed. Licensed family daycares offer the best cost-to-quality ratio for many families; unlicensed arrangements carry higher risk.

Pros

  • 15–30% less expensive than licensed daycare centers
  • Smaller group size often beneficial for infants and sensitive toddlers
  • More flexibility in drop-off/pick-up times than institutional centers

Cons

  • Provider illness or vacation creates immediate backup coverage need
  • Quality highly variable — licensing is not universal across states
  • Less structured curriculum than accredited centers

Who This Is Best For

Families comfortable with a home setting, value smaller group ratios, and have flexibility for backup care plans. Always verify licensing status, references, and conduct an unannounced visit before enrolling.


3. Full-Time Nanny — Best for Multiple Children, Worst per-Child Cost

National Avg. Weekly Cost: $700–$1,200/week ($3,000–$5,200/month)
High-Cost Cities (NYC, SF, Boston, Seattle): $1,000–$1,500+/week
Mid-Cost Cities: $700–$950/week
Low-Cost Markets: $500–$700/week

Nanny cost economics change significantly with multiple children. One child with a full-time nanny in a mid-cost market: ~$800/week ($41,600/year). Two children: same $800–$900/week — effectively halving the per-child cost and beating quality daycare rates in mid-to-high cost markets.

Note: Nannies are household employees. Federal and state employment taxes (FICA, FUTA, state unemployment) add approximately 10–12% to gross wages. Nanny payroll services (SurePayroll, GTM Payroll) cost $400–$800/year to manage compliance.

Pros

  • One-to-one or two-to-one care ratio — maximum attention per child
  • Sick child coverage — nanny comes to you (eliminates sick-day work interruptions)
  • Schedule flexibility; can assist with other household tasks

Cons

  • Highest per-child cost for single-child families
  • Employer tax and legal obligations require payroll compliance
  • Nanny turnover creates care disruption; backup plan required

Who This Is Best For

Families with two or more young children (where per-child economics improve sharply), families with irregular or demanding work schedules, and parents willing to take on the employer relationship for maximum scheduling flexibility.


4. Au Pair — Best for Long Hours and Cultural Exchange

National Avg. Monthly Cost (All-In): $1,800–$2,500/month
Agency Program Fee: $8,000–$10,000/year (amortized into monthly cost)
Weekly Stipend (2026 requirement): $224.10/week minimum (U.S. State Department)
Hours Allowed: Up to 45 hours/week, max 10 hours/day

Au pairs are young adults (18–26) from abroad who live with the host family, providing childcare for a State Department-regulated weekly stipend plus room and board. The all-in cost — agency fees, stipend, room, board, educational reimbursement ($500/year), and program fees — runs $1,800–$2,500/month for up to 45 hours/week of care, making it cost-competitive with full-time nannies at significantly more hours.

Pros

  • Up to 45 hours/week coverage at lower hourly cost than a nanny
  • Cultural exchange and language exposure for children
  • Live-in arrangement eliminates commute/drop-off logistics

Cons

  • Full cultural compatibility and integration management falls on host family
  • Requires a private bedroom — not feasible for all living situations
  • 12-month commitment with limited flexibility if relationship doesn't work

Who This Is Best For

Dual-income families needing 40–45 hours/week of childcare where full-time nanny economics don't work, who have a private bedroom available and are prepared for a host family relationship. Best suited for older children (toddler+) given the au pair's variable childcare training.


5. Pre-K and Preschool (Ages 3–5) — Most Affordable Center-Based Option

National Avg. Monthly Cost (Private Preschool): $500–$1,200/month
Public Pre-K: Free to $200/month in states with universal Pre-K programs
High-Cost States: $1,000–$1,800/month
Low-Cost States: $300–$600/month

At ages 3–5, children transition to lower-ratio classroom settings, dramatically reducing costs. State-funded Pre-K programs are available in 44 states — income eligibility and program quality vary significantly. Federal Head Start programs provide free comprehensive pre-K services for income-qualifying families nationwide.

Pros

  • Significantly lower cost than infant/toddler care
  • Structured learning environment aligned with kindergarten readiness
  • Free or low-cost public options in many states and income brackets

Cons

  • Typically part-day (3–6 hours) — does not cover full working day
  • Supplement with aftercare or part-time nanny/daycare for full coverage
  • Public program availability and quality varies enormously by state

Who This Is Best For

All families with 3–5-year-olds should explore public Pre-K and Head Start options before enrolling in private preschool. The combination of public Pre-K + aftercare is often 30–50% cheaper than full-time daycare center enrollment for working parents.


6. Part-Time Daycare (3 Days/Week) — Best for Partial-Schedule Families

National Avg. Monthly Cost: $600–$1,200/month (varies by center policy)
Coverage: Typically Monday/Wednesday/Friday or Tuesday/Thursday + optional days
Waitlist Status: More flexible than full-time slots at most centers

Part-time slots are not always 60% of full-time cost — many centers charge 70–80% for part-time to maintain revenue per spot. The savings are real but not proportional. Part-time arrangements work best when paired with a parent working reduced hours, a grandparent providing the other days, or a nanny share arrangement.

Pros

  • Meaningful cost reduction vs. full-time enrollment
  • Maintains daycare socialization and structure on coverage days
  • Works well within hybrid childcare arrangements

Cons

  • Part-time slots are less available than full-time — waitlists can be longer
  • Inconsistent 3-day schedule may be disruptive for some children under 18 months
  • Some centers require eventual transition to full-time as enrollment grows

Who This Is Best For

Parents working 3 days/week, remote workers needing dedicated focused days, or families combining daycare with grandparent or nanny share coverage. Confirm part-time policies before selecting a center.


7. Nanny Share — Best Urban Value for Infant Care

National Avg. Monthly Cost (per family): $900–$1,600/month
How it works: Two families share one nanny; each pays 60–65% of individual nanny rate
Typical arrangement: Same home (alternating) or separate homes with location premium

Nanny shares split a full-time nanny's cost between two families, typically reducing each family's cost by 35–40% while the nanny earns more than two individual part-time gigs. Finding a compatible share family requires intentional networking — local Facebook parent groups, Nextdoor, and nanny agency matching services are the most common discovery channels.

Pros

  • 35–40% cost savings vs. solo nanny hire
  • Nanny earns competitive wages — better retention than solo part-time
  • Social peer interaction for the child (better than solo care)

Cons

  • Share family scheduling conflicts require ongoing negotiation
  • Illness in one household affects both families
  • Nanny employment taxes still apply — both families are co-employers

Who This Is Best For

Urban parents with an infant or toddler who can coordinate with a compatible share family in close proximity. Requires higher coordination than daycare but delivers near-nanny-quality care at daycare center prices in many markets.


Childcare Cost by State Tier (Full-Time Infant Daycare)

State Tier Example States Avg. Monthly Cost
Very High Cost MA, DC, NY, CA, WA $2,000–$3,200
High Cost CO, MN, NJ, CT, IL $1,600–$2,200
Mid Cost TX, FL, GA, AZ, OH $1,000–$1,600
Lower Cost TN, NC, IN, KY, MO $750–$1,100
Lowest Cost MS, AR, AL, SD, WY $500–$850

How We Researched This

This guide draws on Care.com's 2026 Cost of Care Survey (14,000+ respondents), the NDCCP (National Database of Child Care Prices) from HHS, Economic Policy Institute childcare cost data, and Child Care Aware of America's 2026 state-by-state affordability report. State cost ranges reflect licensed center-based care for infants under 12 months. Last updated: April 2026. We review this guide annually as costs change significantly year-over-year.


Frequently Asked Questions

How much does daycare cost per month in the US?

The national average for full-time infant daycare at a licensed center is $1,200–$2,100/month in 2026. Costs vary significantly by state — Massachusetts and California average $2,500–$3,200/month for infant care, while Mississippi and Arkansas average $500–$850/month.

Is a nanny cheaper than daycare?

For one child, a nanny is typically 2–3x more expensive than daycare. For two children, a nanny becomes cost-competitive with or cheaper than two separate daycare enrollments. The break-even point depends on your specific market's daycare rates and nanny hourly rates.

What is the cheapest childcare option?

Family home daycare and nanny shares are typically the most cost-effective options for full-time coverage. For ages 3–5, public Pre-K (free in many states) combined with aftercare is often the most affordable full-day coverage arrangement. Head Start provides free comprehensive services for qualifying low-income families.

Do childcare costs qualify for tax credits?

Yes — the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC) allows eligible expenses up to $3,000 for one child or $6,000 for two or more children. The credit rate is 20–35% of qualifying expenses depending on income. Additionally, Dependent Care FSAs allow up to $5,000/year in pre-tax childcare spending through your employer. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.

How do I get on a daycare waitlist?

Contact daycare centers as soon as possible — ideally during pregnancy. Many quality infant care centers have waitlists of 6–18 months. Ask to be placed on multiple waitlists simultaneously. Some centers allow prospective families to "deposit" a spot for $100–$500, which goes toward the first month's tuition if the spot is accepted.

What is universal Pre-K and does my state have it?

Universal Pre-K provides free preschool education for 3 and/or 4-year-olds regardless of family income. As of 2026, New York, California, Vermont, Washington D.C., Oklahoma, Florida, and several other states offer universal Pre-K programs. Program availability, hours, and quality vary significantly — check your state education department for current enrollment.

How do nanny shares work?

Two families agree to share a single nanny's time, typically alternating between homes or designating one primary location. Each family pays the nanny directly at approximately 60–65% of what they'd pay for a solo nanny, while the nanny earns 120–130% of a single family's rate. Both families are co-employers with shared employment tax obligations.

What childcare assistance programs are available?

Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) subsidies are available for low-income working families in every state. Head Start and Early Head Start provide free comprehensive services for income-qualifying children. Military families have access to CDC (Child Development Center) care on base at subsidized rates. Employer-sponsored Dependent Care FSAs allow up to $5,000/year in pre-tax childcare contributions.


Important Disclosures

Childcare costs in this guide represent 2026 national averages and state-tier estimates from published survey data. Actual costs vary significantly by city, neighborhood, specific provider, and child's age. Tax credit and assistance program information reflects current federal guidelines — consult a tax professional and your state's childcare agency for personalized guidance. This content is informational only.

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