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2026 data Public-data reference. official source

Childcare Costs in Rhode Island

Open-data reference.

Annual childcare costs in Rhode Island are 23% above the national average. Infant center-based care costs $17,600/year — 23.5% of median household income.

$1,467/mo
Infant Center
$1,267/mo
Toddler Center
$1,125/mo
Preschool Center
23.5%
% of Median Income
Important: Childcare costs shown are state averages for 2024 and vary significantly by city, provider type, and quality rating. Subsidy eligibility thresholds change annually. Always contact local childcare agencies or childcare.gov for current eligibility and program details. This page provides educational information only and does not constitute financial or legal advice.

Cost Breakdown by Age Group

Rhode Island center-based childcare vs national

Annual cost. Rhode Island vs national reference.

Rhode Island infant$17,600National infant$14,300Rhode Island toddler$15,200National toddler$12,100Rhode Island preschool$13,500National preschool$10,600

Source:

Care Type Monthly Annual (Rhode Island) National Avg Difference
Infant — Center $1,467/mo $17,600/yr $14,300/yr +$3,300
Toddler — Center $1,267/mo $15,200/yr $12,100/yr +$3,100
Preschool — Center $1,125/mo $13,500/yr $10,600/yr +$2,900
Infant — Home $1,042/mo $12,500/yr $9,800/yr +$2,700
Toddler — Home $917/mo $11,000/yr $8,500/yr +$2,500

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP) · 2018-2022 State averages for Rhode Island. Costs vary significantly by city, provider type, and quality rating.

Affordability Analysis

State Median Household Income
$74,891/yr
Infant Center Cost as % of Income
23.5%
Federal Affordability Benchmark
7%

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines affordable childcare as costing no more than 7% of household income. In Rhode Island, infant center-based care consumes 23.5% of the median household income — 16.5 percentage points above the affordability threshold.

Rhode Island Context: Among the most expensive per capita; limited competition in small state

What Drives Childcare Prices in Rhode Island

Center-based infant care in Rhode Island averages $17,600/year or $1,467/month — 23% above the national average of $14,300/year. Toddler center care runs $15,200/year, preschool-age center care $13,500/year, and family (home-based) infant care $12,500/year. The center-versus-home price gap of $5,100/year for infants reflects different licensing tracks: Rhode Island child care centers operate under commercial licensing with staff-to-child ratios typically capped at 1:3 or 1:4 for infants, while family child care homes follow small-group rules allowing up to six children in a residential setting. These are full-time annualized rates — part-time schedules are typically charged at ~70% of full-time rather than pro-rated day-by-day, and a registration deposit of $75-$250 plus one to two months of tuition is standard at enrollment.

The share of household income consumed by infant center care in Rhode Island — 23.5% of the state median income of $74,891 — sits 16.5 percentage points above the federal 7% affordability benchmark set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The national share is 19.2%, which means Rhode Island families face a heavier relative burden than the typical American household. Where burden exceeds 20%, the state effectively becomes an affordability desert — families must either stagger work schedules, rely on unpaid family caregivers, or secure CCDF subsidy to close the gap. Licensed provider density (slots per 100 children under age 5) is the practical constraint families hit first: even at market-rate prices, infant rooms in Rhode Island often carry 6-18 month waitlists.

To find a licensed provider in Rhode Island, start with the state's Child Care Resource and Referral (CCR&R) network — the official intake point for both provider searches and CCDF subsidy applications. Request every provider's current inspection report (public record through the state licensing portal), review their staff turnover rate, confirm their QRIS quality rating if the state operates a rating system, and verify NAEYC or NAFCC accreditation status. For subsidy, families earning up to 85.0% of state median income (roughly $5,305/month gross) qualify for CCDF vouchers; parent copayments follow a sliding scale. Head Start covers ages 3-5 free for households under 100% of federal poverty line, and state-funded pre-K programs cover eligible 4-year-olds in many Rhode Island school districts at zero cost. Employer-side Dependent Care FSAs ($5,000/year pre-tax) and the federal CDCTC credit (20-35% of up to $3,000 per child) layer on top of any market-rate tuition paid directly.

CCDF Childcare Subsidy in Rhode Island

Rhode Island participates in the federal Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) program, which provides childcare financial assistance to working families with low to moderate incomes.

  • Income eligibility typically up to 85.0% of state median income
  • Child must be under age 13 (up to age 18 with special needs)
  • Parent/guardian must be working, in school, or in job training
  • Income-based copay; subsidy covers remaining provider cost

How to Apply

  1. Visit childcare.gov or your state's DHS/DSS website
  2. Search for the Rhode Island childcare subsidy application
  3. Gather: proof of income, child's birth certificate, work/school documentation
  4. Apply online or at a local office; waitlists may apply

Income limits and copay amounts change annually. Contact your local childcare agency for the most current eligibility thresholds.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does childcare cost in Rhode Island?
In Rhode Island, center-based infant care averages $17,600/year ($1,467/month). Toddler care averages $15,200/year and preschool center care $13,500/year. These figures are 23% above the national average of $14,300/year. Source: Child Care Aware of America, 2024.
What percentage of income goes to childcare in Rhode Island?
Infant center-based childcare in Rhode Island costs approximately 23.5% of the state's median household income ($74,891/year). The national average is 19.2%. The federal affordability benchmark is 7% of household income — most Rhode Island families pay well above that threshold.
Can I get childcare assistance in Rhode Island?
Yes. Rhode Island participates in the federal CCDF (Child Care and Development Fund) program, which provides childcare subsidies for eligible families. Income eligibility is typically set up to 85.0% of state median income (approximately $5,305/month gross income). Contact your local Department of Social Services or visit childcare.gov to apply and check current Rhode Island income limits.
Is home-based childcare cheaper than a daycare center in Rhode Island?
Yes. In Rhode Island, home-based (family childcare) infant care averages $12,500/year ($1,042/month), compared to $17,600/year for center-based care — a savings of $5,100/year. Home-based care may offer more flexible hours and smaller group sizes, though regulations vary.
All federal data sources used on this page

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