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New Care.com Report Reveals Soaring Childcare Costs Are Crippling Majority of American Families


Care.com's 2023 Cost of Care Report found that parents spend 27% of their household income (HHI) on average on childcare, up from 24% just a year ago and nearly four times the amount deemed affordable by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (7%). The research also found that the majority of parents (59%) expect to spend more than $18,000 on childcare in 2023, nearly double the cost of in-state college tuition.

The report comprises survey results of 3,000 parents and a decade of childcare cost data. It reveals an imploding post-pandemic childcare landscape for U.S. households with children, or 40% of the total U.S. population. Lengthy and costly daycare waitlists along with sky-high childcare prices continue to have a major impact on how families juggle care, participate in the workforce, and manage their household finances.

"America's childcare crisis is just that: a crisis for the entire country and it impacts us all, whether you have children or not," said Tim Allen, CEO, Care.com. "Childcare is claiming a disproportionate amount of household incomes and a decade of rising childcare costs should be a wakeup call that the system as we know it completely fails the vast majority of families."

Natalie Mayslich, President, Consumer for Care.com added, "So much is discussed about the staggering college debt families incur. What does it say about our system that a year of childcare for more than half of American families is actually double the cost of in-state college tuition?"

Highlights from the 2023 Cost of Care Report:

A Decade of Rising Weekly Costs*:

Childcare Costs Continue to Soar:

The Daycare Dilemma:

Childcare Villages Are Changing:

Childcare's Impact on Families

Family Type

Work Type

Top Childcare Arrangement

Preferred Childcare Arrangement

Percent (%) Spending More Than $18K on Childcare in 2023

Avg. Percent (%) of HHI Spent on Childcare

Single Moms

Hourly

Daycare (35%)

Daycare (30%)

48%

28%

Salaried

Daycare (66%)

Daycare (64%)

80%

28%

Single Dads

Hourly

Paid Family (33%)

Paid Friends/Nanny (31%)

49%

31%

Salaried

Paid Friends (33%)

Nanny (29%)

47%

23%

Married Moms

Hourly

Paid Family (40%)

Nanny (40%)

64%

31%

Salaried

Daycare (32%)

Nanny (37%)

63%

26%

Married Dads

Hourly

Paid Friends (35%)

Nanny (33%)

59%

28%

Salaried

Nanny (36%)

Daycare (43%)

61%

22%

Top 5 Most Expensive States for Childcare

Top 5 most expensive states to hire a nanny:

Top 5 most expensive states to hire a babysitter:

Top 5 most expensive states for daycare (infants):

State

Weekly Rate

State

Weekly Rate

State

Weekly Rate

Washington D.C.

$885

Washington D.C.

$194

Washington D.C.

$417

Massachusetts

$864

Hawaii

$189

Massachusetts

$326

California

$849

Massachusetts

$189

Washington

$310

Washington

$838

Washington

$188

California

$288

Connecticut

$799

California

$188

Connecticut

$260

Along with the report, Care.com released a new childcare cost calculator for families to estimate hourly rates for in-home care in their city.

The full results of the 2023 Cost of Care Report can be found here and access to graphics displaying the data can be made available upon request.

2023 Cost of Care Report Methodology

This sample of 3,000 U.S. adults was surveyed on April 25, 2023 and April 27, 2023. All respondents are parents of children 14 years or younger and currently pay for professional childcare, confirmed by both consumer-matched data and self-confirmation. Audience quotas were set to obtain a statistically significant sample of customized geographic regions. DKC Analytics conducted and analyzed this survey with a sample procured using the Pollfish survey delivery platform, which delivers online surveys globally through mobile apps and the mobile web along with the desktop web. No post-stratification has been applied to the results.

Weekly rates for nanny, babysitter and after-school sitter are based on 2022 advertised rates on Care.com. All daycare and family center rates are based on rate information from centers listed on Care.com, except for 2013 rates, where daycare and family care center rates for infants and toddlers are based on Child Care Aware's national data.

About Care.com

Available in more than 17 countries, Care.com is the largest online platform for finding and managing high-quality family care. Care.com is designed to meet the evolving needs of today's families and caregivers, offering everything from household tax and payroll services and customized corporate benefits packages covering the care needs of working families, to innovating new ways for caregivers to book jobs. Since 2007, families have relied on Care.com's products?from child and elder care to pet care and home care. Care.com is an IAC company (NASDAQ: IAC).



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