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10 counties Avg infant $14,934/yr DOL NDCP 2022

Childcare Costs in New Hampshire

10 counties with cost data

Avg Infant (Center)

$14,934 /yr

Across 10 New Hampshire counties

Avg Toddler (Center)

$14,160 /yr

Center-based weighted average

Avg Preschool (Center)

$12,415 /yr

Center-based weighted average

Infant cost spread

$13,992 – $15,999

Lowest to highest county

New Hampshire center-based childcare averages by age

Annual cost averaged across all reporting counties. Source: DOL Women's Bureau NDCP 2022.

Infant (under 1)$14,934Toddler (1-2)$14,160Preschool (3-5)$12,415
New Hampshire infant care vs. HHS 7%-of-income affordability ceiling 93.3%
HHS 7% threshold

Bar shows New Hampshire infant care as a share of an $80,000 reference household income. The dark marker shows the HHS 7% threshold — anything past it is officially "unaffordable" by federal definition.

Childcare Landscape Across New Hampshire

Across New Hampshire's 10 counties with NDCP price coverage, center-based infant care averages $14,934/year and toddler care averages $14,160/year — with preschool-age children at $12,415/year. The county-to-county spread ranges from $13,992 at the lowest end to $15,999 at the highest, a difference of $2,007 per year for the same age group. That variation is driven by local market rents, teacher wage floors, and whether the county has a metropolitan core pulling provider costs upward. Every licensed center and family childcare home in New Hampshire operates under a single state licensing authority, meaning the core ratios, training hours, and background-check rules are uniform statewide — what varies is density (number of licensed slots per 100 children) and subsidy acceptance.

Licensing in New Hampshire covers two primary provider categories: child care centers (commercial facilities serving more than a small family group) and family child care homes (operated out of a private residence with a capped enrollment of typically 6-12 children depending on helper assistance). Infant ratios cluster at 1:3 or 1:4 nationally, with the tightest ratios driving center costs higher because infant rooms cannot spread labor across more children. School-age care — covering the 6-12 ages for before- and after-school plus summer programs — averages lower per hour but is often bundled into full-time summer rates that push annual figures up. Families should note that listed rates here are full-time year-round annualized; part-time schedules (2-3 days/week) are typically charged at ~70% of full-time rather than pro-rated by day.

To find a licensed provider in any New Hampshire county, start with the state's Child Care Resource and Referral network — this is the official intake point for both provider searches and CCDF subsidy applications. Use the rankings links above to identify counties where tuition is manageable or where market-rate pressure is heaviest. For enrollment, request each provider's most recent inspection report (public record), their staff-to-child ratios in practice (not just the licensed maximum), their QRIS star rating if the state operates a quality rating system, and their subsidy policy. Federal affordability data uses the 7% of household income benchmark; the New Hampshire average pulls most counties well above that line, which is why Head Start (free for families under 100% of federal poverty line), state pre-K (free for 4-year-olds in many jurisdictions), and employer-side Dependent Care FSAs ($5,000/year pre-tax) remain essential cost-offset tools.

County Infant
Belknap County $14,955
Carroll County $14,327
Cheshire County $14,803
Coos County $13,992
Grafton County $14,785
Hillsborough County $15,603
Merrimack County $14,926
Rockingham County $15,999
Strafford County $15,098
Sullivan County $14,861

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau — National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP). Costs shown are annual estimates U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau — National Database of Childcare Prices (NDCP). Costs shown are annual estimates