'We are in a crisis now:' Childcare costs outpace inflation

Parents are drowning in childcare costs, and high inflation is adding to their laundry list of daily expenses.

According to a recent survey from childcare platform Care.com, the average cost to enroll a child in a licensed day care can set you back $16,692 annually in 2024, or $321 a week for just one child. Infant care in a home day care costs $230 a week, or $11,960 a year.

Meanwhile, the price of a full-time nanny stood at an average of $766 per week, tallying up to $39,832 annually.

One major reason for the uptick in childcare costs is inflation, the same force driving up consumer prices across the board. According to the latest government measure, the cost of day care and preschool rose 4.4% in March compared to a year ago.

While that’s slightly down from the 5.5% year-over-year increase reported in February, it’s still a struggle for millions of families.

The problem has worsened as some childcare centers have been forced to shut down or are at risk of closing following the expiration of pandemic-era funds.

“It’s frustrating to know there are clear solutions that could help families and that we are not making it happen,” Ailen Arreaza, executive director at ParentsTogether Action, told Yahoo Finance. “Families are in dire need of additional investments in childcare. Childcare is absurdly expensive in our country, and people are struggling.”

Exceeding the cost of college

The cost of childcare accelerated during the pandemic, but in some areas, those costs now surpass the price tag of a college education.

In New York, the average cost of infant care is $15,394 annually per child, or $1,283 per month, according to the Economic Policy Institute. For a four-year-old, those expenses average $12,358 a year, or $1,030 each month.

Meanwhile, in-state tuition for a four-year public college in New York is just $7,938.

Across the US, there are 33 states where childcare is more expensive than college, the Economic Policy Institute found. In some areas, infant care can set you back tens of thousands of dollars more than a college education.

In Washington, D.C., childcare costs $18,487 more than in-state tuition for a four-year college.

“To think that … paying for childcare costs more than it would to send your kid to college is wild,” Arreaza said.

Children from a nearby daycare are escorted in Marcus Garvey Park in the Harlem neighborhood of New York. (Credit: Bebeto Matthews, AP Photo)
Children from a nearby daycare are escorted in Marcus Garvey Park in the Harlem neighborhood of New York. (Credit: Bebeto Matthews, AP Photo) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

And parents across the country are taking out big chunks of their daily income to afford day care.

For example, a typical family with an income of $69,651 in New York would spend 22.1% of their annual income on childcare, while minimum-wage earners, making about $24,544, would spend 62.7% of their annual income on infant care.