Can You Afford a Baby in Nevada? First-Year Cost: $9,300 (2026)
Hospital delivery in Nevada runs $3,300 out-of-pocket with insurance. Then the monthly costs start: diapers, formula, gear, doctor visits. Here's what the first year actually costs — and a calculator to see if your income covers it.
$3,300
Vaginal delivery
(with insurance)
(with insurance)
$5,000
C-section
(with insurance)
(with insurance)
$500/mo
Monthly baby
expenses
expenses
13%
of median income
(first year)
(first year)
Your Numbers
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Delivery Cost
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Monthly Baby Costs
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First-Year Total
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Baby costs as % of take-home pay
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What You're Actually Paying For
Hospital Delivery
| With Insurance | Without Insurance | |
|---|---|---|
| Vaginal delivery | $3,300 | $14,000 |
| C-section | $5,000 | $21,000 |
Monthly Costs (First Year)
Diapers
$85/mo
Formula
$150/mo
Clothing
$60/mo
Gear amortized
$80/mo
Pediatrician
$45/mo
Misc
$80/mo
Total monthly
$500/mo
Formula cost assumes full formula-feeding. Breastfeeding reduces this by $150/mo. Gear cost amortized over 12 months (stroller ~$300, crib ~$250, car seat ~$200, miscellaneous ~$210).
Then daycare starts.
Infant daycare in Nevada averages $1,000/month. That's on top of the $500/mo you're already spending on baby essentials.
Combined: $1,500/month for baby + daycare. That's 25% of Nevada's median monthly income.
How Baby Costs Compare
Average rent in Nevada
$1,400/mo
Monthly baby costs
$500/mo
Baby + daycare
$1,500/mo