Childcare Affordability in Wyoming

All 21 counties ranked by childcare cost as a percentage of median household income. 1 counties exceed the 20% desert threshold.

1
Desert Counties
11.8%
Avg Cost Burden
national: 15.2%
21.5%
Worst Burden
Albany County
21
Counties
# County Infant Cost % of Income
1 Albany County $12,031 21.5%
2 Sheridan County $12,363 17.9%
3 Teton County $15,604 14.4%
4 Natrona County $9,215 13.3%
5 Park County $8,676 13%
6 Platte County $8,242 12.7%
7 Crook County $8,289 12%
8 Big Horn County $7,169 11.7%
9 Weston County $8,394 11.7%
10 Sweetwater County $9,224 11.6%
11 Fremont County $6,901 11.5%
12 Lincoln County $9,522 11.5%
13 Laramie County $8,381 11%
14 Carbon County $7,147 11%
15 Johnson County $6,399 10.5%
16 Converse County $7,956 10%
17 Hot Springs County $5,915 9.2%
18 Goshen County $5,730 9.2%
19 Sublette County $7,714 9%
20 Uinta County $6,787 8.7%
21 Campbell County $6,901 7.4%

Reading the Wyoming Affordability Picture

Across Wyoming's 21 counties with NDCP data, the average cost burden for center-based infant care is 11.8% of median household income, versus the national benchmark of 15.2%. The HHS affordability threshold sits at 7% — meaning any county above that line charges families more than the federal government's own working definition of affordable. Albany County leads the state with a 21.5% burden, where infant center care costs $12,031/year against a median household income of $55,887. The 20% "affordability desert" cutoff used on this page identifies counties where childcare competes directly with housing, healthcare, and transportation for household budget share — in practice, families in desert counties either leave the workforce, rely on unpaid family caregivers, or pursue subsidized care through CCDF or Head Start.

The burden percentages here reflect a structural reality of Wyoming licensing: center-based care operates under staff-to-child ratio rules (typically 1:3 or 1:4 for infants, 1:10 for preschoolers) that cap how much a facility can earn per teacher. Teacher wages in Wyoming have risen to compete with public-sector salary floors, but tuition has risen faster — families now absorb the squeeze between rising operating costs and stagnant median wages. Counties appearing as deserts on this table are not outliers in licensing quality (the state applies uniform rules statewide) but in market dynamics: high rent for center facilities, limited licensed-slot supply relative to demand, and a shortage of family child care homes (which historically offered a lower-cost alternative but have declined nationally by roughly one-third over the past decade).

Families in desert counties should prioritize Wyoming's CCDF subsidy program as the first cost-offset tool — eligibility typically extends to households earning up to a defined share of state median income, and parent copayments follow a sliding scale rather than the full market rate. Head Start slots (free for families under 100% of federal poverty line) cover the 3-5 age band at no cost. Employer-offered Dependent Care FSAs allow up to $5,000/year in pre-tax spending; the federal CDCTC credit covers 20-35% of up to $3,000 per child ($6,000 for two or more). For infant and toddler ages where no federal free-care program exists, nanny-shares (splitting one caregiver across two families) and licensed family child care homes typically run 15-30% below center rates. Use the county links in the table to see age-group pricing and historical trends before enrolling — and contact the Wyoming Child Care Resource and Referral agency for subsidy-eligible provider lists with open slots.

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau — National Database of Childcare Prices (2022). HHS affordable childcare benchmark: 7% of family income. Desert threshold: 20%+ of median income U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau — National Database of Childcare Prices (2022). HHS affordable childcare benchmark: 7% of family income. Desert threshold: 20%+ of median income