New Mexico
Working families in New Mexico need accessible, affordable, quality child care and early learning opportunities for their children.
Currently, federal and state early learning programs reach thousands of young children and their families in New Mexico. But too many working families in New Mexico are missing out. As a direct result of child care issues, the New Mexico economy loses millions of dollars each year in the form of lost earnings, productivity, and revenue.
In the state, 60% of children have all available parents participating in the workforce, while the average cost of care is $13,521 a year (or $1,127 per month).
More than 9,500 children ages 5 and under have child care costs subsidized through the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG), or 27% of those eligible. The average copay with a CCDBG subsidy is $430 a month.
7.2K children receive care, learning, nutrition, and other services at no cost through Early Head Start/Head Start (or 13% of those eligible for Early Head Start and 25% of those eligible for Head Start).
And 16.9K working families have the cost of their child care offset through the Child + Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC).
However, many working parents still struggle to access affordable, quality child care, which costs the state’s economy an estimated $860 million each year in lost earnings and productivity.
New Mexico: In The Headlines
For Some Tribal Communities, Head Start Programs Provide a Cultural Lifeline
The 74 | June 23, 2025
Of the 34 Head Start and Early Head Start programs in New Mexico, half are on tribal lands; Walatowa is one of three that implements a formal language immersion program.
Free Child Care For All In New Mexico—Savings, Strains And Takeaways
Forbes | September 11, 2025
According to the First Five Years Fund’s New Mexico fact sheet, with nearly 137,500 children under five—and 60% of them with all available parents in the workforce—the demand is immense.
Despite gains in child care supply, New Mexico still falling short in meeting families’ demand
Santa Fe New Mexican | June 17, 2025
Despite significant progress in the number of child care slots in New Mexico, the state is still falling far short of fully meeting the needs of families.
New Mexico Resources & News
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