Montana infant center care at $1,000/month is $230/month below the national average. The 5.9% effective state income tax rate compresses your take-home relative to no-tax states like Texas or Florida. These two factors — care cost and state tax — interact directly with your salary to determine whether working makes financial sense.
The monthly math alone rarely tells the full story. A parent earning $35,000/year nets roughly $1,030/month after Montana taxes, infant center care, and a typical commute. That's real income — but the more durable argument for staying employed is what leaving costs: a 3-year career gap typically runs $185,000–$250,000+ in lost wages, missed retirement contributions, and the documented 12–20% salary penalty on re-entry.
If center care is tight on your budget, Montana home-based providers average $780/month for infants — roughly 70–80% of center rates. Cutting to 3 days per week of care reduces your childcare bill by about 40% without cutting income by 40% (since your salary scales less cleanly). Both switches often make working clearly positive when full-time center care feels marginal.