Updated April 2026
Daycare Cost in Nevada 2026: A Complete Guide for Parents
The median cost of infant center daycare in Nevada is $184 per week — roughly $795 per month or $9,544 per year. That's 6% above the U.S. national median. Costs vary significantly by county, and most Nevada families combine multiple strategies to afford it.
How much does daycare cost in Nevada?
The U.S. Department of Labor publishes a National Database of Childcare Prices covering 3,224 counties. According to the most recent data, infant center care in Nevada averages $184/wk, or $9,544/yr. Family-based home daycare runs about 25% cheaper — roughly $138/wk in most counties.
Costs decrease as children get older. Toddler care (1-2 years) typically runs 15-25% lower than infant care because licensed staff-to-child ratios loosen. Preschool care (3-5 years) is typically 30-40% lower. School-age before-and-after care is often 50-60% lower.
Nevada sits near the national average for childcare cost. County-level variation is typically larger than state-to-state variation.
Where is daycare most expensive in Nevada?
The most expensive counties for infant center daycare in Nevada:
- Clark County — $276/wk ($14,333/yr)
- Washoe County — $257/wk ($13,368/yr)
- Esmeralda County — $190/wk ($9,858/yr)
- Eureka County — $190/wk ($9,858/yr)
- Lincoln County — $190/wk ($9,858/yr)
These tend to be metro counties with high cost-of-living, strict licensing requirements, and high real estate costs that flow through to provider pricing.
Where is daycare cheapest in Nevada?
The most affordable counties for infant center daycare in Nevada:
- Lyon County — $159/wk ($8,242/yr)
- Douglas County — $177/wk ($9,218/yr)
- Carson City — $179/wk ($9,314/yr)
- Churchill County — $184/wk ($9,544/yr)
- Elko County — $184/wk ($9,544/yr)
How do people afford daycare in Nevada?
Most Nevada families combine multiple strategies. The biggest single saver is a Dependent Care FSA through your employer — you can set aside up to $5,000/year tax-free, saving roughly $1,500-2,000 annually for households in the 22-24% federal bracket. Combine this with the federal Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (up to $1,050 per child on the first $3,000 of expenses, double for two children) for additional savings.
Income-qualified families can apply for Nevada's share of the federal Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG). Eligibility caps are generally 85% of state median income, but many states use lower thresholds and have waitlists. Check Nevada's Department of Health and Human Services website for current application status.
Other common strategies: family-based home daycare (typically 20-30% cheaper than center care); employer benefits like onsite daycare, backup care, or care stipends; family help (grandparents, relatives); and choosing employer location or residence within lower-cost counties when possible.
Daycare alternatives in Nevada
Family-based home daycare: Licensed providers caring for children in their own homes. Typically 20-30% cheaper than center care, with smaller groups and more flexibility. Quality varies — check state licensing and inspection records.
Nanny share: Two families share one nanny, splitting the cost. Common in metros where center care is most expensive. Effective hourly rate per family roughly matches center daycare.
Care.com / Sittercity / local nanny networks: Find part-time or hourly care. Useful for parents with flexible schedules or who only need a few days/week of care.
Co-op preschool: Parent-run programs where families take turns assisting. Typically half the cost of conventional preschool, plus community-building.
Head Start / state pre-K: Federally funded for low-income families with children 3-5. Universal pre-K for 4-year-olds exists in some states (varies in Nevada — check $Nevada Department of Education).
Childcare burden in Nevada
The Childcare Burden Index measures annual cost as a share of median household income. Nevada's average burden is 29.0%. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services treats childcare as affordable only when it costs no more than 7% of household income — so Nevada exceeds the affordability threshold statewide. Burden varies dramatically by county; see the county-level data on our Nevada state page.
Frequently Asked Questions
The median weekly cost of infant center daycare in Nevada is $184, or about $9,544 per year. That's 6% above the U.S. national median of $174/wk. Source: U.S. Department of Labor National Database of Childcare Prices.
Median monthly daycare cost in Nevada for infant center care is approximately $795 ($184/wk × 4.33 weeks/month). Annual cost: $9,544. Family-based home daycare typically runs $596/month — about 25% cheaper than centers.
Free daycare is rare but exists in two forms: (1) Subsidized care through Nevada's share of the federal Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) for income-eligible families — typically below 85% of state median income. (2) Universal pre-K for 4-year-olds, which exists in some states (Georgia, Oklahoma, DC) and varies in Nevada. Head Start serves children 3-5 in low-income households nationwide. Some employer-sponsored programs and church-based co-ops also offer free or sliding-scale care.
Nevada administers federal childcare subsidies through CCDBG (Child Care and Development Block Grant). Eligibility is generally capped at 85% of state median income, and benefits cover a portion of cost (not all). Application is through Nevada's Department of Health and Human Services or equivalent agency. Expect waitlists in many states — federal funding only covers ~16% of eligible families. Nevada may also offer state-specific tax credits beyond the federal Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit.
For one child, daycare in Nevada ($184/wk) is significantly cheaper than a nanny ($800-1,200/wk for 40 hours at $20-30/hr typical rates). The math reverses with two or three children — a single nanny rate covers all kids, while daycare charges per child. Most Nevada families with one child use daycare; nannies become competitive with two-plus kids.
Nevada families typically combine: (1) Dependent Care FSA — tax-free up to $5,000/year (saves ~$1,500-2,000 for typical brackets); (2) Federal Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit — up to $1,050 per child on $3,000 in expenses; (3) State subsidies via Nevada's CCDBG program (income-qualified); (4) Employer benefits like onsite daycare, backup care, or stipends; (5) Family help (grandparents, relatives); (6) Family-based home daycare (~25% cheaper than centers); (7) Choosing lower-cost counties when relocating. At 29.0% average burden of household income, Nevada exceeds the HHS affordability threshold of 7%.
Lyon County is the most affordable county in Nevada for infant center daycare at $159/wk ($8,242/yr). The five cheapest counties are: Lyon County, Douglas County, Carson City, Churchill County, Elko County.
Clark County is the most expensive county in Nevada for infant center daycare at $276/wk ($14,333/yr). The five most expensive counties are: Clark County, Washoe County, Esmeralda County, Eureka County, Lincoln County.
All cost data on this page comes from the U.S. Department of Labor's National Database of Childcare Prices, which compiles county-level cost data from state market-rate surveys. Median household income comes from the Census Bureau American Community Survey 5-year estimates. The Childcare Burden Index is calculated as annual childcare cost ÷ median household income.
Read next
All counties in Nevada ranked by cost and burden
National ranking by infant center cost
How CCDBG and state programs work
Federal and state credits explained
When each option makes financial sense
Cost data from DOL National Database of Childcare Prices. Burden Index = annual childcare cost ÷ median household income (Census ACS).