Head Start Eligibility in Alaska
2026 income limits, categorical eligibility, and how to apply
Alaska uses a separate, higher FPL schedule for all federal programs. The Head Start income limit for a family of 4 in Alaska is $50,700/year (130% of Alaska FPL).
Does Your Family Qualify?
Enter your household size and income to check against Alaska's 2026 Head Start limit
Gross income before taxes. Categorical eligibility (foster care, TANF, SSI, homelessness) qualifies automatically regardless of income.
Head Start Income Limits in Alaska — By Household Size
Alaska uses higher federal poverty guidelines (+25% above continental US).
| Household size | Annual income limit | Monthly income limit |
|---|---|---|
| 1 people | $24,400/year | $2,030/month |
| 2 people | $33,300/year | $2,780/month |
| 3 people | $42,000/year | $3,500/month |
| 4 people (reference) | $50,700/year | $4,230/month |
| 5 people | $59,400/year | $4,950/month |
| 6 people | $68,300/year | $5,690/month |
| 7 people | $77,000/year | $6,420/month |
| 8+ people | $85,700/year | $7,140/month |
Source: 2026 HHS Federal Poverty Guidelines at 130% FPL (Alaska schedule). For households larger than 8: add approximately $8,700/year per additional person.
Categorical Eligibility — Qualifies Without Income Check
Children in Alaska automatically qualify for Head Start if any of these apply, regardless of family income:
Foster care
Children in foster care placement qualify automatically.
TANF recipients
Families receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
SSI recipients
Child or parent receiving Supplemental Security Income.
Experiencing homelessness
Families without stable housing under McKinney-Vento.
Programs can also enroll up to 10% of slots for families above the income limit at grantee discretion — ask your local program.
How to Apply for Head Start in Alaska
Alaska Head Start programs serve urban centers and rural villages, including remote Native communities. Alaska uses higher FPL guidelines (25% above continental US) for all federal programs.
Find programs in your county
The ACF Head Start Center Locator shows every grantee in Alaska. Filter by zip code or county to find your nearest program.
Gather your documents
Most programs ask for: child's birth certificate, proof of income (recent pay stubs or tax return), proof of address, immunization records, and health insurance information.
Apply early
Many Alaska programs have waitlists. Apply as early as possible — before age 2 for Early Head Start, before age 3 for Head Start.
Head Start Eligibility in Other States
More for Alaska Families
CCDF Childcare Subsidy in Alaska
Income limits and how to apply
Free Pre-K in Alaska
State-funded program eligibility
Daycare Costs in Alaska
Average by age and care type
Head Start — All States
Compare income limits nationwide
Can I Afford Daycare?
Affordability ratio calculator
Child Care Tax Credits
Federal credit + dependent care FSA