Skip to main content

Cost of Daycare by Province in Canada (2026)

Updated

Daycare Costs by Province

The map below shows average monthly daycare costs for toddlers (18 months – 3 years) across Canadian provinces.

Average Monthly Daycare Cost (Toddlers)

Provincial Daycare Costs

Province Infant Monthly Toddler Monthly Preschool Monthly
Ontario $1,500–$2,000 $1,100–$1,600 $1,000–$1,400
British Columbia $1,200–$1,800 $1,000–$1,400 $900–$1,200
Alberta $1,100–$1,400 $900–$1,100 $800–$1,000
Nova Scotia $1,000–$1,200 $850–$1,000 $750–$900
Saskatchewan $900–$1,100 $750–$900 $650–$800
Prince Edward Island $900–$1,100 $750–$900 $650–$800
New Brunswick $800–$1,000 $700–$850 $600–$750
Newfoundland $400–$600 $350–$500 $300–$450
Manitoba $350–$500 $300–$400 $250–$350
Quebec $220 $220 $220

Rates shown are before provincial subsidies for non-Quebec provinces still implementing $10/day.

$10-a-Day Childcare Progress by Province

Province Target Date Current Status (2026)
Quebec Already there $10.95/day since 1997
Manitoba 2023 Achieved $10/day
Newfoundland 2024 Achieved ~$10/day
Yukon 2024 Near $10/day
Nova Scotia 2026 Significant reductions
New Brunswick 2026 In progress
PEI 2026 In progress
Saskatchewan 2026 In progress
Alberta 2026 In progress
British Columbia 2026 Significant reductions
Ontario 2026 Significant reductions

How Fee Reductions Work

Province Reduction Method
Most provinces Funding to daycares, who reduce fees
Ontario Opted-in daycares reduce fees by 50%+
Quebec Flat $10.95/day for subsidized spaces

Daycare Costs by City

Most Expensive Cities

City Median Monthly Cost (Toddler)
Toronto $1,400–$1,800
Vancouver $1,300–$1,600
Calgary $1,000–$1,300
Ottawa $1,100–$1,400
Victoria $1,100–$1,400
Kelowna $1,000–$1,200

After Subsidy (Participating Daycares)

City Approximate Monthly (with $10/day subsidy)
Toronto $700–$1,000 (50%+ reduction)
Vancouver $600–$900 (up to 50% reduction)
Calgary $500–$700
Montreal $220 (available subsidized space)

Cost by Child Age

Age Group Staff Ratio Typical Premium
Infant (0–18 months) 1:3 or 1:4 Highest cost
Toddler (18 months–3 years) 1:5 or 1:6 Medium cost
Preschool (3–5 years) 1:8 to 1:10 Lower cost
School-age (before/after) 1:10 to 1:15 Lowest cost

Infant care requires more staff, which increases costs by 20–40%.

Types of Child Care

Licensed Options

Type Cost Range Pros Cons
Daycare centre $800–$2,000/month Regulated, reliable Wait lists, less flexibility
Licensed home daycare $600–$1,200/month Smaller groups Limited spots
Workplace daycare Varies Convenient Not always available

Unlicensed Options

Type Cost Range Pros Cons
Nanny $2,500–$4,000/month One-on-one, flexible Expensive, HR responsibilities
Nanny share $1,500–$2,500/month Lower cost than solo Need compatible family
Family/unlicensed provider $500–$1,000/month Flexible, affordable Unregulated, no subsidies

Hidden Daycare Costs

Cost Typical Amount
Registration fee $50–$200
Supply fee $100–$500/year
Late pickup fee $1–$5/minute
Vacation holds Half or full fee
Summer closure Find backup care
Sick day backup Lost wages or backup care

Tax Benefits for Childcare

Child Care Expense Deduction

Child Age Maximum Deduction
Under 7 $8,000/year
7–16 $5,000/year
Disabled child $11,000/year

This deduction reduces taxable income, not taxes directly. At a 30% marginal rate, $8,000 deduction saves $2,400.

How to Claim

Requirement Details
Who claims Lower-income spouse (usually)
Receipts needed Yes, from provider
Eligible expenses Licensed or registered care
Nanny expenses Eligible if have SIN

How to Find Affordable Daycare

Strategies

Strategy Potential Savings
Get on wait lists early Access to subsidized spots
Check workplace benefits Some offer subsidies
Apply for provincial subsidies Income-tested support
Consider licensed home daycare Often 20–30% cheaper
Look at not-for-profit centres Often more affordable

Provincial Subsidy Programs

Province Program Income Threshold
Ontario OCCMS Based on income
BC Affordable Child Care Benefit Up to $200K family income
Alberta Child Care Subsidy Income-tested
Most provinces Sliding scale subsidies Varies

Daycare Wait Lists

City/Region Typical Wait Time
Toronto 1–2+ years for infant
Vancouver 1–2 years
Calgary 6–12 months
Montreal (subsidized) 1–2+ years
Smaller cities 3–12 months

Tips for wait lists:

  1. Register immediately upon pregnancy confirmation
  2. Apply to multiple centres
  3. Check unlicensed options as backup
  4. Ask about priority lists for siblings

Comparing Full-Time vs Part-Time

Option Monthly Cost Notes
Full-time (5 days) $1,000–$1,800 Most common
Part-time (3 days) $600–$1,100 Not pro-rated
Part-time (2 days) $400–$900 Limited availability
Drop-in $50–$100/day For occasional use

Part-time daycare is rarely 40% of full-time cost — spots are less efficient for centres.

Daycare vs Nanny: Cost Comparison

For one child:

Option Monthly Cost
Daycare (Toronto) $1,400–$1,800
Nanny (live-out) $3,000–$4,000
Nanny share $1,500–$2,500

For two children:

Option Monthly Cost
Two daycare spots $2,600–$3,400
Nanny $3,200–$4,500
Nanny share $2,000–$3,000

Nanny costs may be similar or cheaper with 2+ children.

Key Takeaways

  • Daycare costs range from $220/month (Quebec) to $2,000/month (Toronto infant)
  • $10/day childcare is rolling out — check with local daycares
  • Get on wait lists as early as possible (even before birth)
  • Tax deduction of up to $8,000/child under age 7
  • Consider licensed home daycare as a more affordable option
  • Provincial subsidies available for lower-income families