Arizona Childcare Cost Rankings
Arizona counties ranked by infant center care cost, from most expensive to most affordable. The most expensive is Maricopa County at $270/wk, and the most affordable is Yuma County at $188/wk.
Across 15 Arizona counties with DOL pricing data, the median weekly cost of infant center daycare is $215 ($11,180 per year). That puts Arizona 24% above the U.S. national median of $174/wk. Within the state, prices vary widely — Maricopa County runs $270/wk while Yuma County runs just $188/wk, a 44% gap between most and least expensive county.
The Childcare Burden Index measures annual infant center cost as a share of local median household income. Across Arizona, 14 of 15 ranked counties (93%) carry a "High" or "Severe" burden — a family earning the local median income would spend 15% or more of gross pay on daycare alone. 5 Arizona counties are classified as "Severe" (burden ≥ 20%). The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services treats childcare as affordable only when it costs no more than 7% of household income. The single highest-burden Arizona county is Apache County at 31.2% of median income.
All figures come from the U.S. Department of Labor's National Database of Childcare Prices (2022), with median household income from the U.S. Census Bureau ACS. The DOL collects pricing through state-level market rate surveys conducted under the federal Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) program — these are the same numbers state agencies use to set childcare subsidy reimbursement rates.
Top 3 Most Expensive Counties
Maricopa County, AZ
Median income $80,675
Most expensive county for infant center daycare in Arizona at $270/wk ($14,040/yr). Family-based daycare runs $180/wk, about 33% cheaper. Childcare burden of 17.4% well exceeds the 7% HHS affordability threshold.
Pima County, AZ
Median income $64,323
Second-most expensive at $250/wk for infant center care. Infant family daycare $175/wk ($9,100/yr).
Apache County, AZ
Median income $37,483
Third-most expensive at $225/wk. Preschool center care drops to $175/wk as ratios loosen.
| Rank | County | Infant/Wk | Annual | Burden |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Maricopa County | $270 | $14,040 | 17.4% High |
| #2 | Pima County | $250 | $13,000 | 20.2% Severe |
| #3 | Apache County | $225 | $11,700 | 31.2% Severe |
| #4 | Coconino County | $225 | $11,700 | 17.4% High |
| #5 | Navajo County | $225 | $11,700 | 23.2% Severe |
| #6 | Yavapai County | $225 | $11,700 | 18.7% High |
| #7 | Cochise County | $215 | $11,180 | 19.1% High |
| #8 | Graham County | $215 | $11,180 | 17.4% High |
| #9 | Greenlee County | $215 | $11,180 | 15.2% High |
| #10 | Santa Cruz County | $215 | $11,180 | 21.5% Severe |
| #11 | Gila County | $209 | $10,855 | 19.6% High |
| #12 | Pinal County | $209 | $10,855 | 14.8% Moderate |
| #13 | La Paz County | $188 | $9,750 | 20.9% Severe |
| #14 | Mohave County | $188 | $9,750 | 18.2% High |
| #15 | Yuma County | $188 | $9,750 | 17.3% High |
Arizona Childcare Cost FAQ
Maricopa County is the most expensive county for infant center daycare in Arizona at $270/wk ($14,040 per year). The Childcare Burden Index there is 17.4% of median household income ($80,675).
Yuma County has the lowest infant center daycare cost in Arizona at $188/wk ($9,750 per year). Across the 15 Arizona counties with DOL pricing data, the spread between most and least expensive is 44%.
The median weekly infant center care cost in Arizona is $215. The U.S. national median is $174, so Arizona runs 24% above the national median. Annualized, the typical Arizona family pays $11,180 per year for infant center daycare.
14 of 15 Arizona counties (93%) have a Childcare Burden Index of 15% or higher — meaning a family earning the local median income would spend at least 15% of gross income on infant center daycare. 5 Arizona counties are classified as "Severe" (burden ≥ 20%). The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services treats childcare as affordable when it costs no more than 7% of household income.
Family-based (home) daycare is typically 20-30% cheaper than center-based care across the country, and Arizona follows the same pattern. Each county page shows the exact infant family vs. infant center weekly rate, plus toddler, preschool, and school-age figures for both setting types. School-age care is usually the cheapest category, since school-age children only need before- and after-school coverage rather than full days.
The this entity category groups every U.S. childcare prices entity sharing this attribute. The list above is the data; the paragraphs below explain what the grouping means against the broader the DOL National Database of Childcare Prices distribution and how to read the relative rankings within the category.
For readers using this category as a starting point, the per-entity detail pages linked from the table above carry the underlying the DOL National Database of Childcare Prices data in full. The category-level view is the filter; the per-entity pages are the actual answer.