Child Care Aware® of America’s (CCAoA) analysis found an increase in both the number of child care centers and the number of family child care (FCC) homes from 2023 to 2024. The increase in the number of centers continues a trend seen since 2020. However, the increase in the number of FCC homes reverses a downward trend that has persisted for several years. 

Child Care Centers

The number of licensed centers totaled 84,592 in 2020 and 92,613 in 2024, in the 40 states with complete data. Between 2023 and 2024, the number of licensed child care centers increased by 1.6%.

Family Child Care Homes

There were 99,958 licensed FCC homes open in 2020 and 98,807 open in 2024, in the 39 states that had available data. From 2023 to 2024, the number of licensed FFC homes increased by 4.8%. This marks the first time in several years that CCAoA’s data reveals an upward trend in the number of licensed family child care homes.

Examining the data more closely, the supply of FCC homes dropped in 29 of the 39 states with complete data. Four states (California, Kansas, Massachusetts, and Virginia) each had an increase of more than 10% in FCC home supply. Six other states had smaller increases in FCC home supply (Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, New York, Oregon, South Carolina). See the map below for more data on state trends in child care supply.

2024 Child Care Supply: State Trends

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2024 Child Care Affordability

CCAoA found that the national average price of child care for 2024 was $13,128. That average was calculated by averaging three methodologies for understanding national prices for the 49 states and Washington, DC, for which we had price data.

  • It would take 10% of a married couple with children’s median income to afford this national average price. 
  • It would take 35% of a single parent with children’s median household income to afford this national average price. 

This is more than the current rule from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that child care should not cost families receiving federal child care subsidies more than 7% of their annual income. 

Notably, each state’s child care landscape is unique and the national average price does not fully capture state and local nuances. 

Household Budgets

According to CCAoA’s analysis: 

  • In 45 states plus the District of Columbia, the average annual price of child care for two children in a center exceeded annual mortgage payments from 0.05% to 78%. 
  • In 49 states plus the District of Columbia, the price of center-based care for two children exceeded median annual rent payments by 19% to over 100%. 
  • In 41 states plus the District of Columbia, the average annual price of child care for an infant in a center exceeded annual, in-state university tuition by 0.8% to over 100%.  
  • Child care professionals in a center earn an average of $33,140 per year. Depending on the state, it would take from 44% to over 100% of the average annual child care professional’s wage to afford center-based care for two children.  

Inflation

Child care prices remain high for families. According to CCAoA’s analysis, the price of child care continued to rise in 2024. The five-year increase in child care prices from 2020 to 2024 is 29%. Over the same five-year period, overall prices rose by 22%, meaning child care prices grew by 7% more. 

Regional Child Care Prices 

The average price of care for two children exceeded average housing costs in three of the four regions – Midwest, Northeast and South. As in years past, the average price of child care for two children exceeds annual in-state university tuition in all four regions.

State Child Care Prices

Click on your state to see the full price of child care breakdown: 

Calculating National Prices 

CCAoA calculates a national price of child care by using three methodologies and calculating the average.  

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