DaycareCalc

Daycare Cost in Alaska (2026)

Infant center-based care averages $1400/month in Alaska. 14% above national avg. Toddler care runs $1200/month, preschool $1000/month.

Alaska average monthly daycare costs

Infant (center)

$1400

14% above national avg

Toddler (center)

$1200

$14,400/year

Preschool (center)

$1000

$12,000/year

School Age

$850

Before/after school care

Home-Based

$1100

Family home, infant rate

Nanny

$2,800

Full-time, statewide avg

Source: ACF Child Care Market Rate Survey, 2025. Statewide averages — urban areas typically run 20–35% higher.

Alaska vs. National Average

How Alaska compares to the national average for each age group and care type.

Age / Care Type Alaska
Infant — Center-Based $1,400/mo
Toddler — Center-Based $1,200/mo
Preschool — Center $1,000/mo
School Age — Center $850/mo
Infant — Home-Based $1,100/mo
Nanny (Full-Time) $2,800/mo

Annual Daycare Cost in Alaska

Full-time infant center care in Alaska costs $16,800/year. At the national average that's $14,760/year — Alaska families pay $2,040 more per year for infant care.

Infant / year

$16,800

Toddler / year

$14,400

Preschool / year

$12,000

School Age / year

$10,200

Childcare Subsidies in Alaska

Alaska participates in the federal CCDF (Child Care and Development Fund) program. A family of 4 earning up to $7,200/month (85% of state median income) may qualify for subsidized care. The maximum subsidy for infant care is up to $900/month.

At Alaska's average infant rate of $1400/month, the maximum subsidy covers about 64% of the cost for qualifying families.

Common Questions About Daycare Costs in Alaska

How much does daycare cost in Alaska?

Infant center-based daycare in Alaska averages $1400/month in 2026. That's $170 above the national average of $1230/month. Higher wages and cost of living push prices up. Toddler care runs $1200/month and preschool $1000/month.

What is the difference between center-based and home-based daycare in Alaska?

Center-based infant care in Alaska averages $1400/month; home-based (licensed family daycare) averages $1100/month — about 21% less. Home-based care typically has smaller groups and more flexible hours. Centers tend to offer more structured programs. Both are licensed by the state.

Is a nanny cheaper than daycare in Alaska?

For one child, no. A full-time nanny in Alaska averages $2,800/month versus $1400/month for center-based infant care. For two children sharing a nanny, the equation can flip — two daycare slots at $1400 each ($2,800/month) often exceeds a single nanny cost. Use the daycare vs nanny calculator to compare.

Does daycare get cheaper as my child gets older in Alaska?

Yes — significantly. In Alaska: infant care ($1400/month) → toddler care ($1200/month, 14% drop) → preschool ($1000/month, 29% drop from infant) → school age ($850/month, 39% drop from infant). This pattern holds in every state — staffing ratio requirements loosen as children age.

Daycare Costs by City in Alaska

City-level estimates based on local cost-of-living adjustments to the statewide average.

Or see all 100 cities across the US  ·  compare cities side by side.

See all 50 states

Compare Alaska against every other state — filter by age group and care type, sorted by cost.

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