Home · Daycare Cost by City · Boise, ID

Daycare Cost in Boise, ID

Average monthly and yearly daycare cost across infant, toddler, and preschool ages. Based on 2024 market data.

Near national average (-8% vs US average)
Infant (0-12 mo)
$1100/mo
~$13200 per year
Toddler (1-3 yr)
$900/mo
~$10800 per year
Preschool (3-5 yr)
$850/mo
~$10200 per year
How we calculate this: Averages are based on full-time center-based care (40 hours/week) and pulled from state market surveys, BLS data, and aggregated 2024 Procare reports. Actual prices vary by neighborhood, center quality, and waitlist demand. Home-based daycare typically runs 20-30% less; nanny share runs 20-50% more.

About daycare in Boise, ID

Boise daycare is below national average despite population growth.

What drives daycare cost in Boise, ID

Three things set the price floor for daycare in any market: staff wages, real estate costs, and the state-mandated child-to-teacher ratio. Boise, ID is a near-average metro, and all three of those levers run in roughly the same direction. Infant rates near $1100/month here reflect a balance: Idaho ratio rules still require 1:3 or 1:4 for infants, but the broader cost-of-living lets centers pay competitive wages without pushing prices to coastal levels. Real estate is reasonable for Boise, ID-area daycare operators, and supply has roughly kept pace with demand. Waitlists for infant slots typically run 1-6 months at popular centers.

What is included in the monthly cost

At Boise, ID prices, the monthly tuition typically covers a structured daily schedule, age-grouped classrooms with state-licensed teachers, a play-and-learn curriculum (most centers use a published framework like Creative Curriculum, HighScope, or Montessori-inspired), and snacks plus often one or two meals. Diapers, wipes, formula, and breast milk are usually NOT included — you bring those daily. Some centers include backup care for snow days or teacher absences; others charge a registration fee, supply fee, or summer-camp upcharge that lands outside the headline monthly rate. Always ask for an itemized fee sheet before signing — surprise charges average $50-200 per month at lower-transparency centers.

Subsidy programs available in Idaho

Idaho's Child Care Program supports working low-income families through the Idaho Child Care Program. Idaho is one of a small number of states without state-funded pre-K, though Head Start and federal programs fill some gaps. No state paid family leave. Federal Head Start and Early Head Start are open in Boise, ID for income-eligible families with kids 0-5. You apply through your county's Department of Human Services or the centralized state portal — search 'Idaho child care assistance' on childcare.gov for the current application link.

Calculate your specific budget

Use our free Daycare Cost Calculator to estimate total childcare cost over multiple years, including infant-to-preschool transitions and sibling discounts.

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How to judge daycare quality in Boise, ID

Three signals carry the most weight when judging Boise, ID-area centers: state licensing (non-negotiable — verify the current license at your state child-care licensing site, not just a copy on the wall), NAEYC accreditation (a voluntary national quality standard above state licensing — about 7% of US centers carry it), and staff turnover. Ask any prospective center: 'What's your teacher retention rate over the past 24 months?' Centers with healthy cultures keep teachers 3+ years; high-turnover centers often have understaffed rooms and frustrated kids. In Idaho, also check the state's quality-rating system (most states publish 1-5 star ratings online). Ratio adherence is the other thing to verify: state minimums are floors, not targets — quality centers often run below the maximum allowed.

Real ways to lower your daycare cost

Five levers genuinely reduce daycare cost in Boise, ID. First: Dependent Care FSA — pre-tax up to $5,000/year through your employer, an effective 20-37% discount depending on tax bracket. Second: the federal Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit — 20-35% credit on qualifying expenses up to $3,000 (one child) or $6,000 (two+). Third: in-home or family daycare in your neighborhood typically runs 25-40% less than center-based care in the same area — verify state licensing through your state's online registry. Fourth: ask employers about partner-center discounts; some local employers have negotiated 10-15% off at regional center chains. Fifth: sibling discounts (typically 10-20%) and part-time enrollment (3-day or half-day) options reduce the monthly bill proportionally. Avoid 'unlimited care' marketing copy — read the fine print on registration, supply, and summer fees.

Quick reference: FSA pre-tax savings up to $5,000/year; Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit up to 35% of qualifying expenses; sibling discounts of 10-20%; home-based daycare 20-30% cheaper than center-based; part-time enrollment scales cost proportionally.

Questions to ask when you tour

Bring this short list to every Boise, ID-area tour. 1) 'What is your current licensing status and when was your last inspection?' (Verify against the state portal afterward.) 2) 'What is your teacher retention rate over the past 24 months, and who would my child's primary teacher be?' 3) 'How do you handle naps, feeding, and diapering for infants — and how do parents get updates during the day?' 4) 'What's the total monthly cost including all fees — registration, supplies, holidays, summer camp, late pickup, sick days?' 5) 'Can I see your current curriculum and meal plan?' 6) 'What's your sick-child policy and how often do illnesses spread through the rooms?' 7) 'How long is your waitlist and what's the deposit to hold a slot?'