'Child care desert': In this state, parents pay one-third of their income on child care

A new report says American families that pay for child care spend nearly one-fifth of their income on the service, and costs are rising.

The average household with child care bills spends $325 a week, or 18.6% of its weekly income, according to an analysis by LendingTree, a personal finance site.

In Nevada, the costliest child care state, families spend 32.3% of their income, an average of $493 a week, for others to tend their children, the report says.

LendingTree released the analysis last month, drawing on census data.

Child care expenses eat up more than one-fifth of parental income in eight other states, including Illinois, Louisiana and Texas, the report found.

'It felt like a necessity'

Child care costs pushed Morgan Frey out of her Sparks, Nevada, home.

Frey, 31, was paying $245 a week on child care for her son, who is now 5. That was half of her take-home pay, from her job as a caregiver to seniors. In February 2023, poverty forced her and her son into a homeless shelter.

"It was really hard," she said. "And, honestly, the decision to keep him in school came down to knowing it was best for him. It felt like a necessity."

Morgan Frey, 31, was paying half of her take-home pay on child care for her son at a preschool in Sparks, Nevada. Last year, a local nonprofit swept in to pick up the bill.
Morgan Frey, 31, was paying half of her take-home pay on child care for her son at a preschool in Sparks, Nevada. Last year, a local nonprofit swept in to pick up the bill.

Relief arrived the next month. The Children's Cabinet, a Nevada nonprofit, swept in to pick up Frey's child care costs. In June 2023, she and her son moved into a new home.

"I have enough money to put gas in the car, food on the table," she said.

Only now does Frey realize how stressed out she had become over child care bills.

"I'm able to be a more present parent," she said. "We play catch. We go outside and do things."

Several economic factors have pushed up costs and stretched supply in the child care industry, experts say.

One is inflation, which has raised prices in the past few years. Another is the pandemic, which shuttered thousands of child care centers. A third is the expiration of pandemic-era federal funding for child care centers last fall, a cutback observers liken to a “child care cliff.”

“There’s so much that goes into proper child care, whether it’s wages or rent or insurance or 500 other things,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. “When the cost of everything is rising, it makes all the sense in the world that the cost of child care would, too.”

A child care desert

Nevada, the costliest child care state, exemplifies the national problem and caregiving challenges particular to the state.

Child care options in Nevada are spread thin, because of population growth, a scarcity of providers, and a hospitality industry whose workers need child care at all hours.

“Along with being in the actual desert, it’s full of what they call child care deserts, where there’s simply not enough supply for all the demand that’s out there,” Schulz said of Nevada. “It stands to reason that any place that’s grown so fast would have some issues with keeping up with demand.”