County childcare costs · DOL NDCP 2022

Childcare costs in Dixie County, FL

N/A
Center Infant/yr
N/A
Family Infant/yr
$45,057
Median Income
N/A
% of Income (Infant)

Annual Childcare Costs by Age Group

Age Group Center-Based Family Childcare
Infant N/A N/A
Toddler N/A N/A
Preschool N/A N/A
School Age N/A N/A

Cost Comparison (Center-Based)

What These Numbers Mean for Dixie County Families

Center-based infant care in Dixie County, FL averages N/A/year, while family childcare homes charge N/A/year for the same age group. The gap between the two settings — varies annually for infants — reflects different licensing tracks in FL: centers operate under commercial child care licensing with staff-to-child ratios typically capped at 1:4 for infants and 1:10 for preschoolers, while family child care homes follow small-home rules allowing up to six children with one provider. Preschool-age coverage runs N/A/year at centers versus N/A/year in family settings, and school-age wrap-around care averages N/A/year. These are annualized full-time rates from the NDCP market-rate survey — actual quoted prices swing with QRIS quality tier, accreditation (NAEYC, NAFCC), and whether the provider accepts CCDF subsidy vouchers.

Household affordability in Dixie County tracks against a median income of $45,057, putting infant center care at N/A of gross income. The HHS benchmark is 7%, meaning the typical family here stays within the federal affordability line. Dixie County families generally find care more manageable than the national picture, though waitlists at licensed providers remain the real bottleneck. Providers in this cost band typically require two months of tuition as deposit plus non-refundable registration fees of $75-$250.

Finding a licensed provider in Dixie County starts with the FL Child Care Resource and Referral (CCR&R) agency — these nonprofits maintain searchable databases of licensed centers and family homes, note open slots, and handle CCDF subsidy intake. Ask any provider for their current inspection report (publicly available through the state licensing portal), their staff turnover rate, and whether they participate in the state's QRIS quality rating system. For families earning under $38,298, the CCDF subsidy caps parent copayments at a sliding-scale percentage of income. Head Start slots (free for families under 100% federal poverty line) and state-funded pre-K programs fill the preschool tier at zero out-of-pocket cost where available. This 2022 data provides the baseline — always verify current FL licensing status and tuition directly with the provider before enrollment.

Center-based infant care costs over 2008–2017 (10 years of NDCP data).

+129.1% since 2008
Infant center care: $4,033 → $9,240
$9,240/yr
Most recent annual cost (2017)
10 years
Data available (2008–2017)
2008
$4,033
2009
$4,033
2010
$4,684
2011
$5,335
2012
$5,986
2013
$6,636
2014
$7,287
2015
$7,938
2016
$8,589
2017
$9,240
View full data table (all care types)
Year Ctr Infant
2008 $4,033
2009 $4,033
2010 $4,684
2011 $5,335
2012 $5,986
2013 $6,636
2014 $7,287
2015 $7,938
2016 $8,589
2017 $9,240
2018 N/A
2019 N/A
2020 N/A
2021 N/A
2022 N/A

What this means for Dixie County families

Plan around the county-level NDCP price benchmarks below.

NDCP figures are county-level survey medians for 2022 — confirm current tuition and openings directly with providers and your state CCR&R agency.

Frequently Asked Questions

What age groups does childcare cost data cover in Dixie County, FL?
Data covers four age groups: Infant (0-1), Toddler (1-2), Preschool (3-5), and School Age (6-12). Both center-based and family childcare costs are tracked separately for each age group.
What is the HHS childcare affordability standard?
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines childcare as affordable when it costs no more than 7% of a family's household income. Counties where infant care exceeds 20% of median income are classified as "affordability deserts."
Where does the childcare cost data come from?
All data comes from the National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP), maintained by the U.S. Department of Labor's Women's Bureau. It provides county-level childcare price estimates based on market rate surveys.

Data Sources & Methodology

Data as of 2023. Source: U.S. Department of Labor, National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP).

Childcare cost data from the U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau — National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP). Costs are annual estimates based on weekly median prices at the county level.

Affordability is measured against the HHS benchmark of 7% of household income. Median household income data from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey.

Related

Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the National Database of Childcare Prices (DOL Women's Bureau). Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.

Verify with DOL Women's Bureau NDCP →  ·  Verify with U.S. Census ACS →  ·  Verify with HUD →