Daycare vs Nanny vs Au Pair in District of Columbia (2026)
Daycare center in District of Columbia: $2,400/month (95% above national avg). Full-time nanny: $4,200/month (56% above national avg). Au pair: fixed at $1,800/month nationwide.
District of Columbia — monthly cost for one infant (2026)
Daycare Center
$2,400
Full-time, infant
Home Daycare
$1,900
Family-based care
Au Pair
$1,800
Stipend + agency
Full-Time Nanny
$4,200
Live-out, with taxes
Source: ACF/HHS childcare data, BLS OEWS SOC 39-9011, State Department J-1 program data. 2026 estimates.
District of Columbia vs. National — All Four Options
Monthly costs for one infant. National averages in parentheses.
| Option | District of Columbia/mo | District of Columbia/yr |
|---|---|---|
| Daycare Center | $2,400 | $28,800 |
| Home Daycare | $1,900 | $22,800 |
| Au Pair | $1,800 | $21,600 |
| Full-Time Nanny | $4,200 | $50,400 |
The Two-Child Calculation in District of Columbia
For one child, daycare wins on cost. Add a second child and the numbers shift.
2 daycare spots
$4,800/mo
1 nanny (both kids)
$4,200/mo
1 au pair (both kids)
$1,800/mo
Nanny vs 2 daycare
-$600/mo
Nanny saves you this
For two young children in District of Columbia, a nanny is $600/month cheaper than two daycare center spots. At this point, you're also getting in-home care, a flexible schedule, and no drop-off. An au pair covers both kids for $1,800/month — the cheapest option for multiple children once you factor in room and board as a sunk cost.
Pros and Cons: District of Columbia Context
Daycare Center — $2,400/mo
$28,800/year
Advantages
- Lowest cost per child for one child
- Licensed professionals, structured curriculum
- Peer socialization from infancy
- Regulated ratios and safety standards
Drawbacks
- Fixed hours — no coverage after 6pm
- Sick policies send children home, disrupting work
- Cost doubles for a second child
Home Daycare — $1,900/mo
$22,800/year
Advantages
- Cheapest licensed option
- Smaller group — more individual attention
- Often more flexible than centers
Drawbacks
- Provider illness closes everything
- Less curriculum structure than centers
- Quality varies more widely
Au Pair — $1,800/mo
$21,600/year — stipend + program fee
Advantages
- One price covers multiple children
- Up to 45 hours/week, flexible scheduling
- In-home care — no drop-off
- Second cheapest overall (after home daycare for one child)
Drawbacks
- Must provide a private bedroom
- One-year commitment minimum
- Host family responsibility — you manage this person
Full-Time Nanny — $4,200/mo
$50,400/year
Advantages
- Maximum flexibility — your hours, your rules
- One-on-one attention
- Cost-competitive for two or more children
- No sick-child policy problem — nanny comes to you
Drawbacks
- Most expensive for one child
- Payroll taxes, workers' comp on top of wages
- No backup if nanny is sick
- Average tenure is ~2 years — high turnover risk
Common Questions — District of Columbia
Is a nanny or daycare cheaper in District of Columbia?
For one child, daycare is cheaper — $2,400/month vs. $4,200/month for a nanny. That's $1,800/month more for the nanny. For two young children, two daycare spots run $4,800/month total while one nanny covers both. The nanny saves $600/month for two kids.
How much does an au pair cost in District of Columbia?
About $1,800/month everywhere in the US, including District of Columbia. The weekly stipend is federally set at $195.75/week minimum ($848/month). Agency program fees add roughly $750/month when amortized over the year. You also provide a private room and meals. Au pair coverage is capped at 45 hours/week under J-1 visa rules.
Is an au pair a good deal in District of Columbia?
Yes, especially for high earners. In District of Columbia where a nanny runs $4,200/month, an au pair saves $2,400/month. For two children, that's a $2,400/month savings vs. a nanny and $3,000/month vs. two daycare spots.
More childcare data for District of Columbia