Georgia
Working families in Georgia 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 Georgia. But too many working families in Georgia are missing out. As a direct result of child care issues, the Georgia economy loses millions of dollars each year in the form of lost earnings, productivity, and revenue.
In the state, 65% of children have all available parents participating in the workforce, while the average cost of care is $11,066 a year (or $922 per month).
More than 46,500 children ages 5 and under have child care costs subsidized through the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG), or 21% of those eligible. The average copay with a CCDBG subsidy is $233 a month.
22.1K children receive care, learning, nutrition, and other services at no cost through Early Head Start/Head Start (or 7% of those eligible for Early Head Start and 22% of those eligible for Head Start).
And 214.8K 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 $5.2 billion each year in lost earnings and productivity.
Georgia: In The Headlines
Comfortably affording child care for 2 kids
Atlanta News First | maRCH 4, 2026
Child care costs can often put families in a tough financial spot.
Child Care Is Infrastructure: Why Atlanta’s Economic Future Depends on Early Learning
Saporta Report | jANUARY 26, 2026
Child care is foundational economic infrastructure — and without it, Atlanta’s workforce, families, and long-term economic growth are at risk.
Child care aid helps student parents stay in school; its future is unclear
11 Alive News | jANUARY 14, 2026
For one Georgia mom and daughter, a federal child care program makes learning possible.
Georgia Resources & News
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