Daycare cost per week: COST OF CHILD CARE IN FLORIDA: A BREAKDOWN FOR 2022

Опубликовано: November 20, 2022 в 9:38 am

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COST OF CHILD CARE IN FLORIDA: A BREAKDOWN FOR 2022

One of the biggest expenses that families face in Florida and around the nation is the cost of child care. When choosing a child care provider, families are often tasked with finding a place that both supports and nurtures their child while also fitting into their budget. Compared to the cost of child care in other states, Florida is neither the most expensive nor the least expensive. Mississippi has the cheapest child care in the country, averaging about $5,436 a year. On the flipside, Massachusetts is by far the most expensive, averaging roughly $20,913 a year. The cost of childcare can be more of a financial burden than many expect. It is significantly more expensive to use child care services for infants and toddlers than it is for children of preschool age.

Are you wondering what the cost of childcare is in Florida? Let’s take a look at what you need to know.

What Is the Average Cost of Childcare in Florida?

It costs, on average, $770 per month for infant care in Florida, amounting to an annual cost of $9,238. To send a four-year-old to child care costs an average of $7,287. This breaks down to $607 a month.

Amazingly, the costs of infant care in Florida cost nearly $5,000 more than in-state tuition to attend a four-year public college in Florida. It also means that the cost of infant care costs nearly 70% of the average cost of rent in the state.

What Are the Most and Least Expensive Cities in Florida For Child Care?

Whether you’re in Florida or Massachusetts, the cost of living in a town will usually have an impact on the cost of child care. That means that the higher the cost of living in your city, the more expensive child care tends to be on average. The most expensive cities for child care in Florida are:

  • Naples
  • West Palm Beach
  • Boca Raton

On the flipside, some of the least expensive cities for child care in Florida are:

  • Lakeland
  • Kissimmee
  • Tallahassee

If you are moving to Florida and have children that will attend child care, the costs are substantial enough that it’s worth factoring the average cost in your new city into your equation.

The Average Cost of Child Care Services In Florida’s Biggest Cities

Miami Child Care

According to the Miami Herald, paying for child care is the second-biggest expense for Miami-Dade families that have children. This comes in just behind the cost of housing. Miami daycare costs can range between $95 a week and $220 or more a week.

Orlando Child Care

If you’re looking for child care services in Orlando, you can find options between $95 a week and more than $325 a week. Many options fall within the range between $140 and $190 per week.

Tampa Child Care

The cost of child care services in Tampa can range between $130 and $200 a week or more. Like many other cities in Florida, there is a wide range of child care provider options in Tampa.

Jacksonville Child Care

The range of child care costs in Jacksonville is between $100 and $200 per week. This means you can expect to pay between $400 and $800 per month for child care.

St.

Petersburg Child Care

You can find child care services in St. Petersburg that range between $145 a week and $190 a week or more. This means that you can expect to pay somewhere between $580 and $760 a month.

Hialeah Child Care

There are options for child care in Hialeah that range between $95 a week and $147 a week or more. This means you can expect to pay between $380 and $588 a month in Hialeah.

Tallahassee Child Care

You can find a range of child care costs in Tallahassee, from $140 a week to $170 a week or more. This means you can expect to pay between $560 and $680 per month.

Port St. Lucie Child Care

Port St. Lucie has childcare options that range between $140 a week and $180 per week. This means that you can expect to pay between $560 and $720 per month in Port St. Lucie.

Cape Coral Child Care

There are daycare options in Cape Coral that range between $130 a week and $150 per week or more. This means you can expect to pay between $520 and $600 per month in Cape Coral.

Fort Lauderdale Child Care

You can find a wide range of costs for childcare in Fort Lauderdale. Pricing ranges from $50 per week to $259 per week. This means that you can spend anywhere from $200 a month to $1,036 a month on child care.

What Other Factors Impact the Real Cost of Child Care For Your Family?

When you are choosing a child care for your children, it’s easy to just look at the enrollment fee and make a decision based on that. However, there are additional costs that you’ll want to consider as they can have a very real impact on how much of your budget you need to devote to child care.

You’ll want to look into the details at different providers and learn what is and isn’t included in the cost of enrollment. For example, some schools might require that you supply diapers and food while others might have these costs built into the fee.

Additionally, you will want to think about how far the child care center is from your home and work. How much time will you spend driving back and forth, and how much will this cost you in gas? You might find that a slightly more expensive child care that is closer to your home might actually be preferable to a center that is farther away but a bit less expensive.

You also will want to look into whether or not you qualify for a subsidy. This can mean that you can afford to send your kids to child care that is more expensive than you previously thought.

Is It Time For You to Find Child Care?

There are many benefits associated with sending your child to child care. It is a great way for your kid to socialize with others, learn behavioral skills, and participate in a regular schedule or activities. It can also help set them up for success in their school-age years to come.

The cost of childcare is an important factor when you are deciding where to send your children. However, there are a lot of other considerations that are equally as important. That’s why Tootris is dedicated to helping match parents and providers so that you can find the perfect child care for your little ones, without sacrificing quality or breaking the bank.

Is it time for you to find child care? If so, register with us today!

How Florida Child Care Costs Compare: Here are the 10 states with the highest Child Care, preschool, infant care, and day care annual costs:

  1. Massachusetts ($20,913)
  2. California ($16,945)
  3. Minnesota ($16,087)
  4. Connecticut ($15,591)
  5. New York ($15,394)
  6. Maryland ($15,335)
  7. Colorado ($15,325)
  8. Washington ($14,554)
  9. Virginia ($14,063)
  10. Illinois ($13,802)

Child care for this baby costs more than the University of Michigan

Kathleen O’Reilly Farhat looks forward to the day she can pay for college for her two young sons.

That will be cheaper than child care.

Kathleen and husband Dustin Farhat pay $464 per week for child care for 5-month-old son Brady and 3-year-old Jack while the couple works full-time jobs.

That’s $1,856 a month, about $500 more per month than their mortgage payment on their home in Bath, in Ingham County.

For baby Brady’s care alone, the Farhats pay $250 per week. That’s $12,500 a year, more than the average net cost for tuition, room and board for a middle class ($48,000-75,000 income) family at the University of Michigan. O’Reilly Farhat said the family’s income is around the top of that income range.

Over the course of 50 weeks of child care in a calendar year, the Farhats will pay $23,200 for their two children. The total by the time both leave for public school will likely be close to $100,000.  

“It’s a choice you make as a parent,” said O’Reilly Farhat, who is chief of staff for State Sen. Curtis Hertel Jr. “I have a career that I love, and I am fortunate enough to take in more than the cost of my child care. (But) the direct cost is the cost of a lake house on any Michigan lake, and it would be a pretty decent house. And a boat.”

Child Care Blues

This is the first in an occasional series of articles on child care in Michigan. If you have suggestions for stories or would like to share your struggles with child care as a parent, child care worker or provider, or as a business owner, please contact Ron French, at [email protected]

The staggering cost of child care is one of the biggest economic burdens facing Michigan families. Its cost can delay home ownership, force children into cheaper, lower-quality child care, and keep some parents out of the workforce, according to Jeff Guilfoyle, vice president of Public Sector Consultants, who helped prepare a 2016 report for the Michigan Department of Education on child care access and affordability.

Child care costs

In some counties in Michigan, average child care costs for two kids can be as much as half the median household incomes, according to a state study.

Source: Study done for Michigan Department of Education

At the same time, many parents are realizing there is a cost to not getting their children into high-quality childcare programs, which research shows can significantly improve educational outcomes.

“The high cost of child care has parents doing math all the time and asking questions like, ‘Can we afford to send our child to a center?’” Guilfoyle said. “‘Can we piece together more affordable care with friends, family, and neighbors? Does one of us have to take a different work shift to reduce our need for care? Does it make sense to work at all?’”

A separate child care market study conducted by Public Policy Associates in Lansing for the Michigan Department of Education found large variance in rates across the state and gaps between child care costs for low-income families and state subsidies for care.

Child care providers charge families in different ways (hourly, weekly or monthly) and not all providers responded to the survey on which the study is based. Hourly rate figures for each county derived in the study are approximations intended for policy analysis at the education department. The study provides data on 63 of the state’s 83 counties.

Wild disparities in costs

Even with those caveats, the data offers a sobering look into the high costs families pay for quality child care.

For example:

  • For many middle class families, with household incomes between $48,000 and $75,000, infant child care is more expensive than the net cost of college at some public universities.
  • In two of Michigan’s most populous counties, Wayne (Detroit) and Genesee (Flint), child care from infancy to kindergarten for two children costs more than the median-priced home, by 32 percent in Wayne and 5 percent in Genesee.
  • The annual cost of childcare for two children (an infant and preschooler) is over 30 percent of the median household income in at least 52 Michigan counties. The U. S. Department of Health and Human Services considers child care costs above 7 percent of household income to be unaffordable.
  • Costs vary wildly, from $71,000 for care from birth to kindergarten in Washtenaw County, to $29,000 for the same years of care in nearby Hillsdale County.
  • In Washtenaw, where Ann Arbor is located, a worker would need to earn $14.11 an hour just to cover care for an infant and preschooler. The minimum wage in Michigan is $9.25 an hour.

Another study, this one by Childcare Aware of America, an advocacy group focused on affordability and access to quality child care, found that the average annual cost of care for an infant and a preschooler in a child care center in Michigan was $17,563 in 2016, a figure similar to or lower than in other Midwestern states. Child care is the largest family expense in the Midwest and Northeast, and is second to housing in the southern and western U.S., according to that study.

“When we thought about having a second child, there was a conversation with my husband that we can’t afford another now,” O’Reilly Farhat recalled. “My husband got a second job (part-time, on top of his full-time job as a firefighter) … so we could afford the daycare costs (for a second child).”

Little help from state

Despite child care costs that overwhelm low-income and middle-class families alike, policymakers have done little to address the issue.

Michigan does less to help low-income families afford child care than almost any state. Michigan has the third-lowest income threshold for child care subsidies, at 130 percent of the federal poverty line. That’s about $32,630 for a family of four. Two parents earning minimum wage would earn $38,480 and not qualify.

And for those who do qualify, the state’s reimbursement rate is lower than the cost of child care at most centers ($3.25 an hour for 3-year-olds, a rate that covers the average cost in only eight counties, according to the state’s child care market study.)

Michigan’s child care services for low-income families was so erratic in 2016 that the state was forced to return federal money for child care assistance it failed to spend.

This spring, Sen. Goeff Hansen, R-Hart, proposed raising the income eligibility threshold for families to receive child care assistance to 150 percent of the federal poverty level (currently $37,650 for a family of four), a level that would still leave Michigan among the stingiest half of states. The effort failed.

Efforts to help middle class families have been similarly unsuccessful.

Sen. Curtis Hertel Jr., D-East Lansing, introduced a bill in January 2017 that offered refundable state tax credits for child care expenses. Families would get a state tax credit based on their income and the federal child care credit they qualified for, with some credit for families with incomes up to $100,000.

Such a bill is vital to businesses as well as families, Hertel said, because the high cost of child care is putting the brakes on Michigan’s economy.

“When you talk about all these job openings (that Michigan businesses are not able to fill), one of the things that is hindering employment is the high cost of child care,” Hertel said. “When you think about minimum wage (or low-pay jobs in general), the math doesn’t work for a lot of people. Is it really possible to put yourself in a situation where you can take advantage of the jobs that are out there?”

Hertel’s bill has yet to receive a hearing in Michigan’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives, and will die if not passed by the end of the term in December.

“In this Legislature, we see a lot about tax credits benefitting business, but few to help working families,” said Hertel, who is running for reelection to the Senate. “I’m hoping that in the next (Legislative) cycle, after the election, we’ll have more people interested in the issue.”

Bill Schuette, Republican candidate for governor, doesn’t address child care costs on his campaign website. An email to his campaign asking for his position on the issue was not answered.

On her campaign website, Gretchen Whitmer, Democratic candidate for governor, calls for an increase in eligibility and reimbursements for child care subsidies to “a competitive level that will remain year after year so parents can make long-term plans for their children. High quality, affordable, safe, clean and reliable child care starting from birth will improve the readiness of Michigan three-year-olds about to enter preschool. It will also give parents the time and peace of mind they need to get a job, pursue a promotion or go back to school themselves.”

Whitmer also advocates for full-day, universal pre-K available for all 4-year-olds by expanding the state’s Great Start Readiness Program that now serves low- and middle-income children.

Whitmer’s education plan does not lay out how those plans would be paid for, though for a start, there is $63 million in new federal funds for child care for the 2019 budget year that is available for use at the state’s discretion.

Guilfoyle, the Lansing policy consultant, argues that Michigan needs to do something to ease the burden of child care on working families. “We’ve been talking about a talent shortage in Michigan,” Guilfoyle said. “If we want to find more talent in Michigan right now for the workforce a great strategy would be to help families access affordable quality child care.

Meanwhile, the Farhat family is looking forward to the day five years from now when both boys are in public school, and the more than $1,800 they now spend every month on child care can be applied to other needs.

“Then we’ll have to turn around and start saving for college,” O’Reilly Farhat said. “Because honestly, there just isn’t the money to do that now.”

How Real Moms Pay for Childcare

Career & Finance

written by OJUS PATEL

    Source: @katiekett

    It’s no secret that paying for childcare is one of the biggest stressors amongst parents today.

    It’s an even heavier burden to bear for those of us who still are paying off student loans in addition to basic living expenses. As noted by Fast Company, the average yearly cost for daycare is higher than the average cost of in-state college tuition; American couples spend at least 25 percent of their incomes on childcare, while single parents spend over 50 percent of their income on childcare.

    Because mothers 1) make 80 percent or less in salary than their male counterparts, 2) are returning to work well before they are ready due to inadequate maternity leave, and 3) disproportionately shoulder the burden of caring for the children, moms all over the country are left feeling overwhelmed, ragged, and as if they are stuck between a rock and a hard place.

    We know you feel it; we do too. In the spirit of learning, connecting, and empathizing with each other, we asked you: How do you do it? How do you manage to pay for childcare?

    This is what you said.

     

    Some of us lean on family (whether we want to or not)

    “My husband and I pay my mom to care for our two kiddos, who are 4 and 2 years old. The peace we have with knowing my mom is caring for our kids is priceless to us. She provides such great care, and we feel so absolutely lucky that we could pay for her to do something she already loves doing.” -Anonymous 

    “We have one child and have hired a nanny for four, 10-hour days. We are splitting this cost 50/50 with my father who has generously offered to help us pay. My father-in-law watches him on the fifth day.” -Anonymous

     

    My husband and I pay my mom to care for our two kiddos, who are 4 and 2 years old.

     

    “We have our 2.5-year-old in a Montessori program three days a week, and my mom watches her two days a week. My husband and I both work full-time. It feels like the perfect combination for her. She is learning so much, and I love the deep bond she and my mom have. When she was born, we did a nanny share for about five months, but it didn’t end up working out so we switched to the Montessori program and love it! It’s insane how expensive childcare is, but we keep reminding ourselves that it is temporary and we budget our salaries to make sure we are able to achieve our financial goals (we just recently bought a house in Chicago, we travel as much as we can, but we also save by not eating out or buying coffee out too often, and shopping is pretty minimal).-Anonymous

     

    Source: @she_plusfive

     

    “It’s a hodgepodge. Our 5-year-old is in full-time Pre-K (tuition), and our 2-year-old is with my mom three days a week (free) and a nanny two days a week (not free). I work remote with super flexible hours and ultimately end up working with a kid or two under tow for at least one hour per day while waiting for my mom or waiting for my husband to come home from work. We actually moved halfway across the country just so that we could have family watch our children. My mom’s our lifesaver, and I will never take it for granted. Ever. It’s the only way I felt comfortable going back to work full-time. Oh, and all of that was to say that we feel grateful we have my mom for part of the time to better be able to afford tuition and a nanny. Next year, my 2-year-old will be in preschool and tuition for two at private school is looking harsh, so we’ll have to consider our situation again.” -Anonymous

    “We are doing a nanny share for our little one. This is our first child, and it’s been such a process to find childcare. In Boston, the daycare waitlists are insane. We started looking in November 2018, and our due date was May 2019; to date, we are still not off of a single waitlist. We are a dual-income family, however, my husband works freelance so his pay is very inconsistent, therefore, my in-laws have offered to help by paying for one week of childcare per month.” -Anonymous

     

    We actually moved halfway across the country just so that we could have family watch our children. My mom’s our lifesaver, and I will never take it for granted.

     

    “We have two kids (one school-aged and one in preschool). My husband and I both work, but there is absolutely no way we would be able to pay for full-time childcare for even just one child on our own. My parents help by paying for half of the childcare cost (we alternate weeks). I literally don’t know what we’d do without their help!” -Anonymous

    “I’m paying approximately $2,400/month for two kids in daycare in the Nashville area—a 3-year-old and a 4-month-old. It’s outrageous! My husband and I both have full-time careers. Even if we wanted another kid, we couldn’t afford it. It’s a fantastic school, but we’ve had to become indebted to my husband’s family to be able to afford it and still put food on the table.” -Anonymous

    “We are a dual-income household—two teachers—and just put our older son in daycare two days a week. We still rely on both sets of grandparents for childcare. My 7-month-old is with grandparents full time, and my 2.5-year-old is with them three days a week.” -Anonymous

    “I am a single mom fortunate to have my mom watch my daughter Monday through Thursday while I work 10-hour days to take Fridays off work. I have Friday, Saturday, and Sunday to spend all day with my daughter. I wake up at 4:30 a.m. Monday through Thursday. It hasn’t been easy, but I’m fortunate to have my family to help out!” -Anonymous

     

    Some of us take on a side hustle

    “We have a 3-year-old and a 1-year-old both in daycare full time. It costs $600 a week. The only way we’re getting by is by renting out our guest house on AirBnb. It brings in about $1,500 per month and is a true lifesaver.” -Anonymous

    “We run a small coffee shop in a small Texas town. That covers most of our bills but not childcare. I manage a 4 bedroom boutique boarding house in order to send our 4-year-old to Montessori. Our 1-year-old comes with me to clean the boarding house, and now I have a nanny share going on for her twice a week for four hours a day. I use that time to run my other business, event coordination and florals. It’s busy times! But we make it happen. Somehow.” -Anonymous

     

    We have a 3-year-old and a 1-year-old both in daycare full time. It costs $600 a week. The only way we’re getting by is by renting out our guest house on AirBnb.

     

    “Being a dual-income family keeps us afloat. But recently, [we started] working part-time for the grandparents’ business to earn extra money for savings.-Anonymous

    “It takes two full-time incomes (plus a side hustle) to pay for two in a full-time private preschool. We ‘joke’ that we’re basically paying college tuition ($40,000/year for both combined) without having had the benefit of saving for 18 years!” -Anonymous

     

    Source: @karissfarris

     

    “I have a 2.5-year-old. She has been in daycare for the last year. When she was 4 months old, I started waitressing some nights while being home with her during the day (mostly to keep my sanity). In order to make going back to work financially feasible, I kept my waitressing job to pay for daycare so it never comes out of my regular-job paychecks. That way it doesn’t really feel like an expense. I waitress two nights a week, and it covers daycare expenses. If I didn’t do that, I’m not really sure how we would pay for it. It amazes me that my parents did this for three kids back in the day. I have so much more appreciation for the hard work and struggle now.-Anonymous

    “I’m a single mom and paying for my now 4-year-old by working extra jobs and trying to get another side business going to give me a bit more cushion and safety net. I did apply for a grant to help due to being a single parent, but the cost is still beyond expensive, and I can’t afford to send my 19-month-old as well!” -Anonymous

     

    Some of us leverage job benefits to help out

    “We just relocated to Dubai, UAE due to my husband’s job. I’m a SAHM, and we have a daughter. So, we are a single-income family, although I’m thinking about going back to work again. As one of the most expensive cities in the world, nursery here comes with exorbitant fees. You start to appreciate that back at ‘home,’ you don’t have to pay at all or even just have reasonable fees. Luckily, during the job negotiations, my husband managed to raise this to his employer, and they agreed to pay for nursery. We are very lucky.” -Anonymous

    “We are dual-income with no family around to help. We use a Dependent Care Account through my job that takes a set amount each month out of my paycheck pre-tax. Then, we pay the preschool and are reimbursed from the account. Our son is 2 and goes Tuesday and Thursday from 9am to 3:30pm. My job is pretty flexible – I work for a public charter school, but I do have monthly meetings with all my students that I have scheduled on those days to minimize the amount of time we have to pay for care. Definitely nervous for next year because we’ll be adding twins to our family in December and will need the same hours for all three kiddos.” -Anonymous

     

    We are dual-income with no family around to help. We use a Dependent Care Account through my job that takes a set amount each month out of my paycheck pre-tax. Then, we pay the preschool and are reimbursed from the account.

     

    “I have twin girls who are 2.5. My husband and I both work full time. I feel very lucky both of our salaries can cover daycare, monthly expenses, save for retirement and put some (very little is left) into savings.-Anonymous

    “In Minneapolis, we are paying for one (soon to be two) at a daycare center. Once the new baby is here, we will be paying $700/week as a dual-income family. I recently took a new job, changing directions in my career, and part of my consideration was higher pay.” -Anonymous

    “I am a single mom, and I do not receive support from my daughter’s dad (in the works). Currently, my parents help me out. I did opt into the full amount for the FSA through my work. The FSA covers about three months of her daycare. Daycare is so expensive, but she needs to go so I can work. I love her school, so it’s worth it. The state only accounts for up to $10,000 in childcare costs even though that’s only about half of what I pay a year. We definitely make sacrifices, and it is tough to make ends meet right now. I am so beyond lucky to have my parents though.” -Anonymous

     “We are a single-income family—I am a physician and my husband is a law student. [We have a] 1 and 3-year-old in university daycare, so we get a small break in price since I am faculty and he is a student. Nevertheless, 23 percent of our income goes to childcare. When a kid is sick, grandma helps and/or I take sick days.” -Anonymous

     

    I am a single mom, and I do not receive support from my daughter’s dad (in the works). Currently, my parents help me out … Daycare is so expensive, but she needs to go so I can work.

     

    “We are a dual-income family with one child. We both work in tech in San Francisco. With that being said, childcare is EXPENSIVE. I toured a Montessori daycare/preschool that with a company discount was only $10K less than I was making in a year. We opted for a nanny share, but that was still expensive. I was up for a review at work and met with my boss (who happens to be HR) and the CEO of the company, and in my pitch for a promotion/review, I gave them a number that would allow me to go 50/50 on a nanny share with my husband. It required a $17K raise. I let them know their option was to get me as close to that $17K raise or that I’d have to quit because I wouldn’t be able to pay for childcare. Thankfully, my company values me and my family, and I secured a $23K raise!” -Anonymous

    “We have one currently in daycare but will have three in 2020 (expecting twins any day now). We are a dual-income house, however, my husband is a full-time Ph.D. student, so his stipend is not very substantial. Because he is a student, we were able to qualify for a child care subsidy through the financial aid office at his school. We were also able to negotiate with our daycare for a multi-child discount off two children instead of one. We also use our FSA to pay tuition pre-tax.” -Anonymous

     

    Source: @hikarimurakami

     

    Some of us had to lean towards the least expensive option

    “We have two kids (3-year-old and 9-month-old), my husband and I are both in grad school, and we have an au pair from Costa Rica. She’s amazing, adores them, and we LOVE having them at home, able to run around and go outside and have the childhood we wanted them to have. Bonus: they were both sick this week, and neither of us had to take time off because they couldn’t go to daycare. Instead, they got to lounge around the house, snuggle, and eat popsicles in bed. An au pair was the least expensive option where we are located, but we have really felt so LUCKY to have such a wonderful woman taking care of our little ones.” -Anonymous

    “We have two boys (ages almost 4 and almost 1). I’m married, and my husband and I have had to plan our family and spacing our kids apart around being able to afford childcare (we pay for them to go to daycare). We’d like another one but will have to wait until at least the oldest is out of daycare.  Daycare is an awesome choice for our family – they learn so much at their school, have built great friendships and the teachers nurture and delight in our boys with us. However, it’s expensive. I can’t imagine being a single parent or a family of lesser means. And our daycare is a church-based one that is partially subsidized, so one of the most affordable daycare options.” -Anonymous

     

    An au pair was the least expensive option where we are located, but we have really felt so LUCKY to have such a wonderful woman taking care of our little ones.

     

    “We have 4-year-old twins, a 7-year-old, and a 13-year-old. We went with an au pair as it was the only thing affordable for us when twins were born. Had we gone with traditional daycare, it would have been my ENTIRE SALARY for the twins’ daycare alone. This ’10 percent discount’ BS for twins or siblings is not feasible. So, we went through an agency called Cultural Care and are on our fourth au pair. All of them have been amazing and are our ‘adult kids.’ Our current au pair is from South Africa, and she has really taught our oldest a lot too.” -Anonymous

    “I have two in daycare currently in NYC. Luckily, I was able to find an in-home daycare about a half-mile walk from my home and close to the subway I commute to work on. The larger daycares that run more like schools grouped by age were around $500-600 per week per child. We couldn’t even afford half of that when we had our first. This in-home one is with a local woman and two helpers in her apartment. It’s approximately 10 kids ages 2 months through 5 years. She teaches them Spanish, cooks and feeds meals, and they spend 10 hours a day there Monday through Friday for $185 per kid per week. With two, we actually got a discount so it’s just $350 a week for both. And it’s still tight!” -Anonymous

    “Our baby is due in December, and I will bring him to work with me when I get back from maternity leave in March. And then the daycare I chose will be able to take him in May. It was the only place we could afford, and it’s $230 per week. We are dual-income, but San Diego is just so expensive. We are really lucky that my work lets me bring him for those first few months because any other daycare was $1,100+. We make about $100K between the two of us, but the cost of living wipes us out.” -Anonymous

    “We live in an area with limited childcare options, so we have our daughter in a small home daycare. Last year, the amount we paid weekly was about the same as my weekly take-home pay. I can’t stay home because our family health insurance is through my employer, so without my career, we have no health insurance. It feels strange to work so many hours and send my daughter to someone else’s care the whole time, yet the pay I make during that time goes directly to paying for her care.” -Anonymous

     

    We live in an area with limited childcare options, so we have our daughter in a small home daycare. Last year, the amount we paid weekly was about the same as my weekly take-home pay.

     

    “My husband and I both have incomes to be able to afford my daughter’s childcare. But to be able to afford it, we had to choose a daycare that is located further away from home. I also work from home on Fridays to get time with her and reduce the costs.” -Anonymous

     

    Some of us had to transition to (or stay with) part-time work

    “My daughter is in daycare three days a week. My husband has a demanding job with fairly regular hours, and I always knew I wanted a job where I could be home at least part-time with my kids. I am in real estate, and making part-time childcare work means working a lot of nights and weekends and during nap time on the days, she is home with me. It’s hard, but I also love the benefits my daughter gets from being in daycare in terms of learning and socialization.” -Anonymous

     

    Source: @anchorandnest via #sharetheeverymom

     

    “My husband works Monday through Friday, and I work three days per week. Our childcare is a constant juggle. Monday is covered by grandma (my mother-in-law), Tuesday we have an in-home sitter who comes to our house for $12 per hour. Friday morning, we have the same in-home sitter and afternoons are covered by nana (my mother). My husband covers all childcare costs as they can alternate depending on needs, vacations, etc. I cover the more fixed costs like the mortgage and student loans. We took my daughter to an in-home sitter for her first two years, but now that we have a second child, we find someone coming to our home to be worth the (substantial!!!) additional cost.” -Anonymous

    “We start daycare for our son next week! Our son will be going three days a week, and my husband is now working part-time to watch him two days a week. Three days a week is $950 a month in Ann Arbor, MI. I’m in tech and make more than my husband, so this seemed to be the best arrangement. This money used to go into our savings. We also made other tweaks to our budget. We’re spending less on going out, I canceled the gym membership and bought a treadmill, and I try to be more efficient with our grocery bill (don’t overbuy, buy in bulk, buy store brand).” -Anonymous

     

    My husband works Monday through Friday, and I work three days per week. Our childcare is a constant juggle.

     

    “We are a two-income household paying for daycare for one child. We moved from Chicago to Milwaukee, WI a year ago knowing we were planning on starting a family. We have over $200K in student loans from grad school, and we realized there was no way we could afford to live in Chicago and pay for daycare at the same time. We were lucky to both find jobs here that actually pay more than what we would make in Chicago as well. We are saving about $1,000 a month in childcare costs here in Wisconsin and were able to buy a house since the home prices are so much cheaper. Our entire family still lives in Chicago, but we are happy with our decision and can still see them often. I was even able to go back to work part-time (four days per week), so I can stay home with my little one once a week. It was a huge sacrifice but worth it for a little bit of financial freedom (just working down those loans now!!).” -Anonymous

     

    Some of us had to transition to (or consider) becoming a single-income household

    “We brought our daughter to our nanny’s house, who had her daughter at home with her, as well. We had to negotiate hourly rates, formally draft a contract and offer her PTO, for just two days a week. Eventually, we gave a 30-day notice and ended our contract. As a new mom, I didn’t feel comfortable being confined with a certain amount of days that we could not bring our daughter to her, without financial penalty. We are now figuring out how to live in a single-income household. Not having the weight of childcare costs had eliminated a huge emotional stress off of my shoulders.” -Anonymous

    “My husband and I both work full-time (dual-income) and pay a lot for our 18-month-old to attend daycare (we live in Orange County, CA). We love his daycare, but would love more than anything for me to be home with him but can’t afford it! Maybe we’ll be forced to afford it when baby #2 comes because there is no way we could afford twice these payments.” -Anonymous

    “We’re two working professionals with well-paying jobs, and it’s still tight. With each kid, we’ve done the math to assess the cost-benefit of the lower-paid adult staying home instead of adding a daycare expense and decided for number two that it was better for both adults to remain employed, but we’re going to feel it out.-Anonymous

     

    We’re two working professionals with well-paying jobs, and it’s still tight.

     

    “We didn’t realize how big of a deal everyone makes MDO programs or school for toddlers here in Dallas, so we made a very last-minute decision in August to enroll our daughter in school two days a week at a local private school (which is actually way cheaper than most daycares here in the city!) at 18 months. We’re a single-income family; I’ve been fortunate enough to stay home with her since she’s been born, but we definitely didn’t have the wiggle room for that large of an added bill, so I’ve started working part-time at a Pilates studio to offset the cost and take a little bit of the burden off my husband. It gives her and I both a chance to enjoy our own ‘things,’ and it gives me a good feeling knowing that I’ve contributed to the family a bit, even if it’s minimal!” -Anonymous

    “We have two kids, and one on the way. We have been double income [family]; but when baby #3 is born, my husband is going to stay home. As my career has progressed, we are in a position where I out-earn my husband 10 times; it just doesn’t make sense for him to keep working. My older two will both be in elementary school next year, so that helps.” -Anonymous

     

    Source: @saschadoesthings via #sharetheeverymom

     

    “I work two days a week, and my husband works full-time. My Fridays are my son and I’s time together. My salary basically pays for the cost of daycare; we haven’t made a ton of sacrifices, just saving less per month than before. It’s frustrating because when our second child is born if we continue this situation, I will be PAYING to go to work every day. That is something I’m struggling with.” -Anonymous

    “Since our daughter was 6 months old, she has been in a full time daycare that we pay ($$$) for as we both work full time and live four-plus hours away from any family. She is now 2.5, and we are expecting a second baby and are in a position where we love our childcare for our daughter, but it may no longer make sense with two kids, as this would be a high 5-digit cost yearly for us (upwards of $60K per year for two kids). Even if it’s a stretch for us financially, for the time being, we will most likely still make that choice since it’s safe, clean, and our daughter has been so loved there. Some of her teachers have even babysat for us so we can go on dates once a month. We really trust them, and that is worth every penny!” -Anonymous

     

    It’s frustrating because when our second child is born if we continue this situation, I will be PAYING to go to work every day. That is something I’m struggling with.

     

    “We currently pay $1,270/month (metro DC area) for full time, co-op Pre-K program for our 3-year-old son. It is affiliated with our local school system (which I keep hours at solely for the purpose of reduced tuition), but he has access to a full inclusion program (amazing at this age!), music class, PE, OT, SLC on staff. We pay for it 100 percent on our own. However, with baby #2 on the way, they asked us to pay tuition starting this September when she’s not even born until November and won’t attend until March! We would have paid $17,500 simply to hold her spot. THIS IS HOW COMPETITIVE IT IS! Actual insanity. So, we are moving this summer, and I’ll now stay home because two in childcare doesn’t make sense. It’s the hard reality of many families.” -Anonymous

     

    Some of us have had to reconsider having more children

    “This can keep me up at night! We have one child and are a dual-income family in the DC area. Due to the high costs of housing/living in the area, the grandparents are graciously helping with the costs of daycare for our 11-month-old. The #1 thing preventing me from thinking of having a second child right now is childcare.” -Anonymous

    “We live in MetroWest of Boston. We chose a non-profit daycare, which is 20 minutes from home but one hour from work. Grandma drives four hours on Sunday night after a 12-hour shift as a nurse to babysit on Monday. She drives back to NY Monday after dinner. I work from home on Fridays, which singles me out at work. I work at a private college as an assistant to the director at the museum, my husband is a radiology resident, and we still struggle to afford our nonprofit daycare. Daycare costs are one of two reasons we haven’t had a second kid yet – daycare and rent. And we are two well-educated, decently paid people!” -Anonymous

     

    The #1 thing preventing me from thinking of having a second child right now is childcare.

     

    “We’re a dual-income household, and a good chunk of my monthly income goes to daycare costs. And that’s just the tuition. The supplies we need to provide all add up too. I have a pretty well paying, full-time Wall Street job and am terrified to have another kid knowing how much money we’d spend to send another child to daycare.-Anonymous

    “My husband and I pay for our daughter to go to a daycare two days a week. My husband switched shifts at his job so he works nights so that we don’t have to have our daughter be at daycare as much. We love our daycare, but it is expensive. We are not able to go on vacations or go on as many date night as we would like to because of it. We want to have another child too, but it is difficult when thinking about having two in daycare at the same time.” -Anonymous

    “My husband and I are a dual-income household, and we have one daughter who is turning 2 shortly. Her daycare tuition is our most expensive monthly bill (followed by the mortgage and student loan payment). In fact, it’s so expensive that we are holding off on growing our family at the very least until she starts kindergarten or we finish paying off student loans. We recently moved to the DC suburbs but don’t let location fool you — even in our mid-size, rural town, daycare was still our highest bill. In fact, childcare was tougher to find in that small town (evangelical town where most have at least one-stay-at-home parent), driving up the costs.” –Anonymous

     

    Source: @luckyandi

     

    “I have twin 2 year-olds who are in full-time childcare since my husband and I both work full-time. We chose a place that is not a ‘corporate’ daycare because we wanted a more intimate environment for our kids where they can get a lot of attention. We absolutely love the place we chose, but the cost is the hardest part. Especially for two kids the same age. We pay full price for one child and get a 10 percent discount for the other, which helps but not a ton. The total cost is almost my entire monthly paycheck (there is about $200 leftover). We have a mortgage, student loans, a car payment, and utilities to pay on top of that, which all comes out of my husband’s paycheck. He makes about $30K more than me per year, but we still feel like we are scraping by each month. We are counting the days until they go to public kindergarten and we can have some disposable income again. The cost of childcare has also led us to decide that we probably won’t have any more kids.” –Anonymous

     

    We are counting the days until they go to public kindergarten and we can have some disposable income again.

     

    “I am a military spouse who teaches full-time. We have a 1-year-old and a 3-year-old in daycare. They go to the base daycare that costs $1,300 a month. Their previous daycare cost us $1,900 a month. Over half of my paycheck goes to daycare costs each month. We don’t have the luxury of family nearby and have too much student debt for me to stay home with the kids. I have to have an income. We want more kids but can’t comfortably financially afford one.” –Anonymous

     

    Most of us have had to tighten our budgets or make major sacrifices

    “Paying for childcare SUCKS! I have two boys and even in an affordable city like St. Louis, MO, it is a lot. I am self-employed, and my husband is in sales, so while we make a good income, it fluctuates month to month. When our second son started earlier this year, it was after I’d taken two months of unpaid maternity leave, and we definitely felt it. We lived really lean to avoid going into debt. You’d be amazed how much you can save when you really take a hard look at your expenses. We cut cable channels, renegotiated our home security contract, found a better deal on car insurance, shopped Aldi (which I now LOVE), canceled our house cleaners, paused the gym membership to run outside all summer, and skipped takeout. We are in a better spot now that I’ve rebuilt my business momentum, but it took hard work and was really uncomfortable. I am glad we took the opportunity to look at all of our spending. There were some no-brainer ways to save that we weren’t even thinking of.” -Anonymous

    “We live in southern California. We have a dual-income household and just one child. We pay $800 a month for childcare, which is super cheap in these parts but also not my first choice. We don’t have our own place to live. We live with my parents now because we cannot afford our own place to rent. When it was just my husband and me, we had our own apartment. But once we had a baby with childcare and adding baby to insurance and other baby expenses, we just couldn’t afford rent, so we moved in with my parents who are out of the way from our social life and work and daycare. With two car payments, two credit cards, loan payments, childcare, and long commutes, we barely have extra money for rent.” -Anonymous

    “We pay $3,200 a month for two children in the Seattle suburbs. We are a dual-income family, but childcare still costs more than our mortgage. We are prepared that for the next few years, we won’t be saving as much as we have in the past (won’t be saving at all unless our budget drastically changes). I realize we are lucky we can afford childcare at all. This is the same price we would pay at a daycare, and the closer to the city you get, the more you pay. So, we will be paying a nanny this amount.” -Anonymous

     

    We pay $3,200 a month for two children in the Seattle suburbs. We are a dual-income family, but childcare still costs more than our mortgage.

     

    “We are a dual-income family with two kids in an HCOL area (WDC suburbs). Our 3-year-old is in daycare, full-day (7:30am – 5pm), five days per week at $1,245 per month (includes lunch and snack). Our 5-year-old is in kindergarten but has before/after care at $550 per month. All said, this is a MAJOR improvement over last year when they were both in full time daycare at $2,600 per month. We skipped funding a college savings fund (529 or other) until the daycare years are/were over. And often relied on my bonus or savings to cover any short falls. Our 5-year-old now has a 529 started which we’re funding with extra money from reduced care costs. Oh, and most importantly, although neither of our families is nearby, grandparents travel to visit/help when one of us is traveling for work (6-8 weeks a year). In-laws are a two to three-hour drive away, and my parents will fly in.” –Anonymous

    “My husband and I both work and send our three kids to a daycare near our house. We have twin boys and a 6-month-old daughter. We have a very detailed budget, and that is how we manage the process. We originally had a nanny for our twin boys. But when she wanted a raise and for us to put them in some type of Mother’s Day program for social interaction, so we knew it was time for a change. We review our budget every month to make sure we are on track and then try to make big adjustment every four months when coincides well with the daycare calendar (fall semester, spring semester, and summer session). Not only do we look at this from a monetary perspective but also a quality of life and quality time with our children. For us, we want prioritize the relationships with our children. Each month we reflect on the time we had with them and make adjustments as necessary.” -Anonymous

    “We currently have one child in daycare. Thankfully, our older daughter started kindergarten this year. We are technically a two income household, but my husband is a realtor, so his income is not consistent. I’ve made daycare costs my responsibility. My husband takes care of all the house costs. It’s tough. One and a half of my paycheck goes to daycare, which leaves very little for all the extras. We sacrifice. We pick and choose. We make it work.” -Anonymous

     

    One and a half of my paycheck goes to daycare, which leaves very little for all the extras. We sacrifice. We pick and choose. We make it work.

     

    “Just this month we went from one kid in daycare to two kids in daycare. The price per week obviously more than doubled. My husband and I both work to pay for childcare, but with two now, we’ve had to be smart with other bills, necessities, and wants.-Anonymous

    “My husband and I both work full-time. We live in Washington, D.C., and our parents and families live back in the Midwest. We family planned, and we’re lucky to have timing on our side that we only had one year of double daycare, which we just finished in August. We’re also lucky that we found childcare that we loved and trusted. But paying for two kids in full time childcare in DC ended up being more each month than our mortgage payments, which we also had to keep paying. Needless to say, we lived on a pretty strict budget and dipped into our savings to make ends meet. It was insane and hard and stressful. I am so thankful to be done with that year but also know that we were very blessed to have wonderful teachers caring for our boys and steady jobs and understanding employers.” -Anonymous

     

    Source: @featuringthefulchers

     

    “Paying for childcare is so hard! You want the best for your child, but you need to keep a roof over your head and food on the table. We are a dual-income household but like many 30 somethings, my husband and I are paying off student debt (from reasonable state schools!), car payments, and a mortgage as well. We manage to make it work by cutting back on buying new clothes for ourselves and trying to not order takeout or coffee. It is a hard struggle every month. We’re definitely not saving money like the books say we should be.” -Anonymous

    “Paying for childcare is so brutal! We have started a nanny share with a friend of a friend to subsidize the cost of a full-time nanny for our two children. Our nanny takes home as much gross pay as my husband (a surgical resident). Daycares’ hours were too restrictive, and due to my husband’s insane work schedule (80+ hour weeks) and my full-time job, we needed help with housework, errands, etc. We view our nanny as more essential than going out for dinner, shopping, or vacations—all of which we forgo to afford her full-time help.” -Anonymous

     

    Paying for childcare is so hard! You want the best for your child, but you need to keep a roof over your head and food on the table.

     

    “We have two girls, ages 4 and 2. They are in full-time care at a very reputable child development center. Our total cost per month is $2,814.60. Both my husband and I work full time in executive level jobs. His is much higher paid than mine, but mine has better benefits, so we use my salary to pay for daycare, and it’s about half of what we spend my take home pay on. I also carry all of the medical insurance for all of us. Then, we save the rest of my salary and live off of what my husband makes. It sometimes makes me feel like my work is a really expensive hobby, but I feel like I would be a terrible stay-at-home-mom, and I know my benefits do help us a lot. We could also choose a less expensive option, but if my girls are going to be there for 40 hours a week, I feel like it has to be somewhere where they are thriving and learning more than they would with me at home.” -Anonymous

     

    Most of us feel like we are just scraping by

    “We are a dual income family, my husband has what you would consider a decent paying job, and I actually make under the poverty line in a government job. We have two girls in daycare, ages 3 and 1, and for me to go to work and send them to daycare, I only bring home $25 after taxes. It’s hard; basically my husband’s entire income has to sustain our family. It’s almost worse than when I was off on maternity leave. I basically work for my benefits package—thank goodness it’s very good or else I may have taken a leave from my job. Also, we live in a smaller town, and I know what we pay for two girls in daycare is what some people in the city pay for one child a day! I can’t even imagine!” –Anonymous

    “My husband pays for childcare, so over half of my income can go to student loans.” –Anonymous

    “I spent my whole income on childcare last year (I think there was 300 EUR left between my salary and the invoice from the childcare facility). This covered a baby and a toddler for four days in daycare and a schoolkid for a lunch break, one afternoon after school, and all day Tuesdays and Thursdays during holidays. In the Netherlands, the government gives you a childcare allowance based on your costs and your income – without that, it would not be feasible. Still, childcare is our biggest expense – even before our housing costs. I see it as an investment in the long run – continuing to work on my career has meant that I have increased my salary over the past four years whereas my childcare costs are slowly reducing. We have always chosen the safe route: I pay for more than I use because I want to avoid stress, and I want my kids to have consistency in the caretakers when I am working. My parents help out sometimes but do not want to be babysitters on a fixed-term basis.” –Anonymous

     

    My husband pays for childcare, so over half of my income can go to student loans.

     

    “While we have now found stable and consistent childcare through a nanny share, our 2.5-year-old daughter has had four nannies in her lifetime because there weren’t enough daycare openings for infants and they were financially inaccessible. We’re a dual-income household and currently pay an average of $1,400 per month for childcare. We don’t have any family here, so days when we couldn’t afford childcare, my husband would take our daughter to work or I would take a day off from work to stay at home with her.” –Anonymous

    “I have a 9-month-old and a 3-year-old in daycare and work as a freelance graphic designer and illustrator. Because my work is feast or famine, some days I barely make enough to cover the cost. I try to remind myself that I’m paying to maintain my career through these young years, but some days, it feels awful.” –Anonymous

    “We are dual income and basically took on a second mortgage by paying for childcare. Our mortgage and childcare payments are the same. How do we do it? We struggle each month, but we make it work. We cut back expenses and sacrifice it all for the little one, but man is she worth it.” –Anonymous

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    Looking for a Russian-speaking kindergarten in Yerevan (Georgia)

    It should be taken into account that not all kindergartens pay due attention to the child’s adaptation. In total, I went around 5 kindergartens and only in one I was forbidden to leave children at once for the whole day without adaptation days for 2-3 hours, despite my willingness to pay. The children are closely monitored by educators and a psychologist, so the kindergarten does not enroll more than three new children at a time. It was necessary to wait for a window in possible days to start visiting. Such uncompromising concern for the comfort of the child aroused my respect, and we waited for our turn. In the kindergarten, where my daughter studied before, the staff tried very hard, but she was taken on a full day from the second visit, and this was our common mistake.

    Not all private kindergartens in Yerevan have enough space , many of them are rather “chamber”. I was looking for a spacious kindergarten. For example, I wanted the entrance group with lockers to be quiet and comfortable. Here, in some gardens, opening the door, you immediately find yourself in the thick of things: noise, din, tears of children, and classes are going on in parallel. In such an environment, it is difficult not to experience stress for either children or adults.

    Moscow has a lot of expensive kindergartens with rich infrastructure and stylish modern design. To people from such kindergartens, most of the children’s educational institutions in Yerevan may seem rather worn out. However, a non-refundable down payment for a child is not taken here (it is this money that is usually spent on repairs in Moscow gardens). Private gardens in both Russia and Armenia are not the most profitable business: often the director has money only for basic repairs without frills, and the priority is to find good educators and decent pay for them. According to my observations, kindergartens in Yerevan are soulful family-type home institutions, where comfort and any renovation of the premises are based on the enthusiasm of the director and love for the profession.

    As a rule, in private kindergartens in Yerevan there are 14 to 16 children in a group, with two teachers working with them. Children are surrounded by maximum care. Attention may even be a little excessive: I saw that some pupils were spoon-fed or dressed outside. If you want your child to be taught to be independent in the kindergarten, it makes sense to warn the teacher about this. In Armenia, communication is of great importance: if you openly and friendly ask for an individual approach to your child, the kindergarten staff will definitely listen and try to accommodate.

    After two weeks of intensive searches, we found a network of kindergartens called Kids’ House, which has three branches in Yerevan. They treat the formation of groups of Russian-speaking children with all seriousness. Our other expectations (organization of space, the availability of full-fledged adaptation, methodological support and content of the training program) were even surpassed by the gardens, so we chose one of the branches. As the director told me, despite the availability of places in Russian-speaking groups, due to the increased demand, they had a problem with the selection of qualified educators. In anticipation of a good teacher, the start of classes may be delayed, sometimes for quite a long time. This point is important to consider when planning a move to Yerevan. Be prepared for the fact that sending a child to a good kindergarten from the first weeks of stay in the country may not work.

    When my children started going to kindergarten, it turned out that the program was simply magical. In Armenia, much attention is paid to the natural knowledge of the world and creativity. In our garden every week there are outdoor activities related to the topic under study. For example, when professions were discussed, the children were taken on an excursion to a real fire station. To study the berries, they organized a trip to the greenhouses, where they could see how strawberries are grown. There was a trip to the planetarium and a real culinary week with dough kneading and bread making.

    The academic program (teaching reading, writing and numeracy) was too easy for my son. In Moscow, he took classes in mental arithmetic and scared me by solving two-valued examples in my head. Here we did not meet this, and the child complained that he lacked such activities. To complicate the program, I agreed with the teacher that she would give her son tasks during the day from the manual I brought to prepare for school. As I have already mentioned, absolutely any problem can be solved through dialogue in Armenia.

    By the way, primary school in Armenia starts at the age of six, not seven. Activities in kindergartens are not designed for those who are already preparing for school: they will be bored, since the standard program does not include lessons as such, children play, walk, sing songs and dance here. As a result, at the age of five, it already makes sense to be like preparatory adaptation courses for school .

    There are English lessons in the program, but they are quite nominal – there is no question of serious study here. True, even in Moscow, with the exception of specialized kindergartens with a specialized study of English, children learn the language more for the sake of diversity. Often a foreign language is included in the program just to make the garden look more attractive to parents.

    Catering in a private kindergarten “Winnie the Pooh”

    Own kitchen!

    Our chefs prepare delicious and healthy dishes on their own according to a specially designed menu.

    Breakfast

    Lunch

    • Seasonal vegetables

      Serving weight: 60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    • Pea soup with beef and croutons

      Portion weight: 250 gr. Energy value: 101.5 kcal.

    • Rye bread

      Portion weight: 50 gr. Energy value: 95 kcal.

    • Chicken fricassee

      Serving weight: 220 gr. Energy value: 353.6 kcal.

    • Buckwheat porridge (crumbly)

      Portion weight: 160/5 gr. Energy value: 258.6 kcal.

    Snack

    Breakfast

    • Milk porridge (millet)

      Portion weight: 200/5 gr. Energy value: 216.7 kcal.

    • Cheese-baked croutons

      Portion weight: 40/5/15 gr. Energy value: 182.4 kcal.

    • Green tea with sugar and lemon

      Portion weight: 180/10/7 gr. Energy value: 42.2 kcal.

    Lunch

    • Dried fruit compote with rose hips

      Serving weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 111 kcal.

    • Boiled rice

      Portion weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 113.9 kcal.

    • Turkey cutlets

      Serving weight: 70 gr. Energy value: 236.3 kcal.

    • Beef borscht

      Serving weight: 250 gr. Energy value: 103.3 kcal.

    • Vegetables according to the season

      Portion weight: 60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    Snack

    • Boiled egg

      Portion weight: 40 gr. Energy value: 78.7 kcal.

    • Vegetable salad (tomatoes, cucumbers)

      Serving weight: 60/60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    • Tea with sugar and lemon

      Portion weight: 180/10/7 gr. Energy value: 42.2 kcal.

    • Biscuits

      Portion weight: 40 gr. Energy value: 166.8 kcal.

    Breakfast

    Lunch

    • Berry compote

      Portion weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 111 kcal.

    • Boiled pasta with vegetables

      Serving weight: 150/5 gr. Energy value: 204.3 kcal.

    • Chicken soufflé

      Portion weight: 80/5 gr. Energy value: 164.1 kcal.

    • Fish soup with potatoes

      Portion weight: 250 gr. Energy value: 113.2 kcal.

    • Seasonal vegetables

      Serving weight: 60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    Snack

    • Shortbread cookies

      Portion weight: 40 gr. Energy value: 166.8 kcal.

    • Rosehip tea

      Serving weight: 180/10 gr. Energy value: 42.2 kcal.

    • Fresh cabbage salad

      Serving weight: 150 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    Breakfast

    • Coffee drink with milk

      Portion weight: 180 gr. Energy value: 93.3 kcal.

    • Butter and cheese sandwich

      Portion weight: 40/5/15 gr. Energy value: 182.4 kcal.

    • Milk porridge “Hercules”

      Portion weight: 200/5 gr. Energy value: 235.1 kcal.

    Lunch

    • Berry kissel

      Portion weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 113.9 kcal.

    • Mashed potatoes

      Portion weight: 180 gr. Energy value: 157.7 kcal.

    • Fish cutlet

      Portion weight: 80/5 gr. Energy value: 147.2 kcal.

    • Chicken soup with vegetables

      Portion weight: 250 gr. Energy value: 118.1 kcal.

    • Seasonal vegetables

      Serving weight: 60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    Snack

    • Tea with fresh mint and lemon balm

      Portion weight: 180/10 gr. Energy value: 42.2 kcal.

    • Grated carrots

      Portion weight: 50 gr. Energy value: 52.3 kcal.

    • Cheesecakes with condensed milk

      Portion weight: 150/10 gr. Energy value: 294.6 kcal.

    Breakfast

    • Tea with sugar and ginger

      Portion weight: 180/10/7 gr. Energy value: 42.2 kcal.

    • Milk porridge “Druzhba”

      Portion weight: 200/5 gr. Energy value: 242.6 kcal.

    • Butter sandwich

      Portion weight: 30/10 gr. Energy value: 137.1 kcal.

    Lunch

    • Boiled beef goulash with gravy

      Portion weight: 65/65 gr. Energy value: 270.3 kcal.

    • Vegetable puree soup with croutons

      Portion weight: 250/5 gr. Energy value: 124.6 kcal.

    • Berry kissel

      Serving weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 113.9 kcal.

    • Boiled rice

      Portion weight: 200 gr. Energy value: 113.9 kcal.

    • Seasonal vegetables

      Serving weight: 60 gr. Energy value: 14 kcal.

    Snack

    • Fruits (bananas, apples)

      Serving weight: 150 gr. Energy value: 89.2 kcal.

    • Tea with milk or cream

      Portion weight: 180 gr. Energy value: 87 kcal.

    • Baked pies (with egg)

      Portion weight: 80 gr. Energy value: 118.7 kcal.

    Five meals a day is included in the cost of a full day of stay in kindergarten.

    A complete menu is an important factor on which the physical and mental development of the baby depends. For your little ones, we offer a balanced five meals a day (for a full day group):

    • breakfast;
    • second breakfast;
    • lunch;
    • afternoon tea;
    • dinner.

    For children prone to allergies, an individual diet is possible. We take a responsible approach to the nutrition of our pupils and prepare delicious homemade meals, not forgetting fresh fruits and vegetables.

    • soups, cereals;
    • fruits, vegetables;
    • dairy products;
    • meat, eggs;
    • compotes and other drinks for children.

    TAURAS KIDS

    TAURAS KIDS

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    WELCOME!
    TO OUR TAURAS-KIDS FAMILY!

    More than 200 parents of
    have already entrusted us with their future!

    Every child is talented in their own way.
    Children’s club Tauras-kids finds an approach to each child, individually revealing his abilities and expanding the horizons of interests.

    WE GIVE CHILDREN:

    Physical development

    • Pool 2 times a week
    • Physical education
    • Charging
    • Active walks
    • Outdoor games

    Intellectual development

    • More than 15 lessons per week
    • English
    • Building Lego
    • Speech therapy sessions

    Disease prevention

    • Pediatric examination
    • Hardening in the pool
    • Four balanced meals a day
    • Quartzization of all rooms

    Art and aesthetic education

    • Staging performances
    • Theme weeks
    • Music lessons

    Classes in our kindergarten take into account the age characteristics and individual abilities of each child

    CHOOSE A GROUP FOR YOUR CHILD

    3-4 years

    Dreamers

    Schedule

    4-5 years

    POCHEMUCHKI

    Schedule

    5-6 years

    EXPLORERS

    Schedule

    6-7 years old

    LOGICS

    Schedule

    Our advantages

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    swimming lessons 2 times a week in our own pool

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    English in a playful way in the Cambridge program

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    from 15 developmental classes per week

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    Own kitchen and cook

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    Small groups for ages

    PHOTO CHILD FOR COUNDED PLANT

    Photo

    9000 and quartz treatment of all premises

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    logopedic support

    Children’s club team

    ZHANNA ARKADIEV

    Leader

    Kunitsina Julia

    Isohomina Galina

    Councilor

    Kunitsina Tatyana

    teacher

    Krasyukova Margarita

    Bucket

    Gornostaeva Daria

    9000

    ANNA BESPEATAYA

    English teacher

    The whole team

    REVIEWS ABOUT US

    Tatyana Antonova

    Good afternoon. My granddaughter, she is 3 years old, goes to this kindergarten. I want to express my deep gratitude to the whole team for the good, well-coordinated and professional work! There are a lot of toys, educators and teachers are engaged with children. The employees of the garden prepared all the holidays with the children and celebrated them merrily. Fairy-tale heroes come to the holidays – just a bunch of impressions remain! And there are more than enough classes: English, sports … The child always goes there with pleasure, it is immediately clear that the soul is invested in the kindergarten.

    My granddaughter learned poems and songs, tells fairy tales, learned to dance, swim with pleasure, tells me with whom and what she played during the day, shows her crafts, It is always warm in groups, I know for sure that the rooms are ventilated. Sick children are weeded out at the entrance. In the morning we have no problem getting ready for the kindergarten – they are waiting for us there! In the evening – do not take your baby home – he says that he will remain to live in the garden! This is probably the most important indicator))) thanks to all the staff for the care and attention to our babies!!!!

    Irishka Romanenko

    Good afternoon We have been going to Tauras kids for the 3rd month, we like it, finally the child goes to the kindergarten with pleasure and even waits for him, this has never happened in the state. garden, tells what he learned new from classes, loves his teacher Yulia and other teachers, says they are “not controversial”, I really like that there are a lot of classes, few children, a large territory and is divided into zones, another bonus for parents is a 50% discount on fitness memberships

    Anastasia Kinder

    Good afternoon! My daughter goes to the youngest group, and the whole family, including Vasilisa, is very happy. Choosing a kindergarten we were worried, the child was to start walking at 2.5 years. It’s pretty early. Therefore, we thank the teachers and the administration of “Tauras” for supporting not only the child during the adaptation period, but to a greater extent us, the parents, patiently explaining how this process usually goes. In many ways, everything went easily and quickly.

    A very sincere and friendly atmosphere contributes to the rapprochement of children, pleasant communication with teachers and parents. The training program and the completely exclusive opportunity to attend additional classes is one of the most significant advantages. As well as an attentive approach to the health of children: examinations, a salt cave, prevention, tasty and healthy food. Personally, I would like to thank the administration for the ability to hear wishes and give objective, prompt feedback.

    Natalia Pavlova

    Good afternoon! We have been going to Tauras Kids for the second year. During this time, my daughter has matured a lot. Speech, thinking, communication in society – a completely different level. Vlada is very pleased, we pick it up in the evening with difficulty (there is a Children’s Town here, for children this is a great entertainment). For two years of visiting the child was sick a maximum of three times, and even then less than a week, wonderful pediatricians monitor the health of children twice a week.

    We do not need to take our daughter to the pool additionally, she swims twice a week with a kindergarten group, and already on vacation we see worthy results: the child is not afraid of water, dives boldly, calmly floats on water and swims under water too. I also want to note English, the pronunciation is set, the vocabulary is constantly growing. As for the sections, the children are brought and taken away by the educators themselves, there is no need to go anywhere, and that’s fine. In terms of nutrition, everything is fine, for the entire period the child has never been poisoned and says that Aunt Tanya cooks deliciously

    Nadezhda Nikitina

    Good afternoon! We have been going to this wonderful garden for a year now. It seems that the municipal one was not bad, but the child did not want to go there. We come here with joy, a variety of thematic classes, friendly competent educators and teachers, administration, excellent food, a swimming pool and a salt cave, English, flute, vocals. Perhaps missed something.

    Oh yes, regular check-ups by doctors. The child expands his horizons every day. And what classes in the theater studio and performances for the holidays !!!!! sometimes I hear that one of the parents would like the children to walk more. They walk, probably, and really not much – once a day, but it seems to me that this is the only small minus. It’s just that everything else would not be in time.

    A huge bonus for parents whose children are additionally involved in sports. Sections – children are taken away and carried out by educators, all in the same building. It is also important for working parents that the garden is open until 20:00 and no one will ask or insist that they pick it up earlier. Everything is fair

    Olga Zakharova-Gross

    Good afternoon everyone! Since 2016 we have been going to Tauras kids Kindergarten, and have never regretted our choice! In my opinion, this is the best garden in the city. All conditions have been created for the child so that he feels comfortable, goes to kindergarten with pleasure, develops, gains new knowledge! The garden has a swimming pool, a salt cave and, not least, the presence of sports sections, to which caregivers take and pick up children.

    I want to express my deep gratitude to the whole team of Tauras kids, for the good, well-coordinated and professional work! Our kids are in good hands

    Igor Sinelshikoff

    Good afternoon. We remember your garden with warmth and love. We went half a year while waiting for a place in the state. It was hard to get used to the new kindergarten later, because of the huge difference in the level of comfort, individual attitude towards the child, nutrition, etc. Adaptation took more than 3 months. In Tauras, the adaptation period lasted about 2 weeks. I remember a large number of crafts, drawings, conversations about fairy tales, favorite teachers, first friends, favorite afternoon snacks, walks, swimming pool.

    I dream that the state gardens will at least half reach your level. Huge greetings from me and my son to educators, cooks, kindergarten management. Keep developing our children, you are doing great. All the best!!!)

    YULIA SHVETS

    We have been going to this garden for 3 years now. This is one of the best kindergartens in the Primorsky region. There is a private playground, a protected area, very good food, a kitchen and a children’s cook, 2 times a week children visit the pool, salt cave.

    From classes there is English, speech development … modeling, creativity and a lot of things. But the most important thing is that the child goes to the garden with pleasure and there are still any sports activities to which the educators take the children and there is no need to torment the child by standing in traffic jams.

    Nadezhda Smirnikhina

    Good afternoon. We have been going to this wonderful nursery for the second generation. First, a daughter grew up here. After the garden, she went to the gymnasium without any preliminary preparation, and the baggage of knowledge from the kindergarten was enough for her to study for 5. Now her son has been going to the kindergarten since the age of 2. He walks with pleasure, it took no more than a week to adapt. Tauras Kids is not just a garden, it is a second home for us.

    Leave a review

    MORE REVIEWS IN OUR GROUP VK

    QUESTION-ANSWER:

    What developmental programs are used in work with children?

    The main program “Tauras-Kids” was developed on the basis of an exemplary general education program “From Birth to School”, and is aimed at creating favorable conditions for a child to fully live preschool childhood, forming the foundations of a basic personality culture, comprehensive development of mental and physiological qualities in accordance with age and individual characteristics, preparing the child for life in modern society. More download

    What are the working hours of the kindergarten?

    We are open from 8.00 to 20.00 on weekdays.

    What are the principles of kindergarten lessons?

    The game is the leading type of activity of a preschool child. At an early age, from one to three years, this is object-manipulative activity – activity with a variety of toys and surrounding objects that is not in full accordance with their socio-cultural purpose and without active interaction with adults.

    For children from three to 6-7 years of age, the leading activity is a role-playing game – a combination of gaming activity with communication, imitating a certain social situation and the forms of role-playing behavior of participants characteristic of it. Which in turn leads to the creation of prerequisites for future educational and cognitive activities.

    Classes in our kindergarten take into account the age characteristics of children and classes are based on the principle of age-appropriateness, taking into account the individual characteristics of each child.

    What activities are there for children?

    For children from 3 years old: Physical education, Lessons with a speech therapist, Motor development, Creativity, Reading, Construction, The world around us, Music, Theatricalization, Interactive classes, learning to swim in the pool, English for the Cambridge program, Mathematics.

    For children from 5 years old are added: Preparation for literacy, Board and didactic games, Computer literacy.

    Is there preparation for school?

    Our children are ready for school after kindergarten. They know how to read, write and count, and not only in Russian but also in English. And they are even ready to enter a swimming sports school!

    How do children eat?

    Proper 4 meals a day – the menu is specially designed taking into account the age requirements for children’s nutrition. Healthy soups, cutlets, dairy products, fresh fruits. Compliance with dietary recommendations in the presence of medical recommendations. There are no frosts and brought, heated food, we make minced meat ourselves from beef tenderloin, our chef cooks in a specially equipped kitchen located in the building.

    How do you take care of children’s health?

    Examination by a pediatrician 2 times a week. Restricted access to children with signs of viral diseases. Morning work-out. Room quartzing. Exercise therapy and physical education 2 times a week. Admission after a long absence with a certificate from a pediatrician on the state of health. Tips for parents on how to keep their child healthy.

    How is adaptation going?

    Caregivers always maintain close contact with parents in order to better understand the characteristics of the baby and help him quickly adapt to a new situation for him. For the period of adaptation, it is possible to visit a kindergarten part-time. Children are surrounded by attention and care, educators tactfully involve the baby in the life of the group.

    What are the conditions of the children?

    Groups are divided by age. There are no more than 12 children in groups. Spacious premises: a classroom, a music hall, a sports hall, a dining room, four groups, each group is at least 40 m2. Fresh renovation. Each child has their own crib, their own locker. Each group is equipped with play and educational equipment, which allows children to find something to their liking, both individually and in a group with peers. Own indoor playground with a playground, sandboxes, swings, a gazebo and a playing field.

    What is the cost of attending kindergarten?

    The cost of visiting a kindergarten depends on several factors: the period of purchase of the service (one day, two weeks or a full month …), the time of visiting the kindergarten (full or part-time), the time of year (summer period or school year) …

    In order to select an individual offer for your child, please call: 8 (911) 922-02-31 or leave a request.

    What discounts are available?

    A 10% discount is available for the second child in the family.

    For each parent whose children attend kindergarten, a 30% discount on a subscription to the Tauras-Fitness fitness club!

    If the child falls ill, will the paid period be recalculated?

    Recalculation is carried out according to the following scheme: skipping the entire month of visiting, with its full payment – 50% of the subscription price for the month, with skipping up to 2 weeks of the calendar month – recalculation of 20% of the subscription price for the month.

    Is there a possibility of video surveillance and feedback?

    Yes, access to video surveillance is issued to parents upon their first visit to the kindergarten. You can do it in a special application on your mobile phone.

    The administration of the kindergarten is constantly in touch and is ready to answer all the questions of parents during the day.

    Can a child visit the sports sections of the Tauras-fitness fitness club while in kindergarten?

    Yes, our educators, at the request of the parents, after paying for the section in the sales department of the club, will change the child’s clothes for the chosen lesson, take him, then take him back to the group after the lesson and change into everyday clothes again.

    If the parent does not have time to pick up the child from the kindergarten?

    If the parents or legal representative did not pick up the child on time, then the child is transferred to the playroom to the caretaker on duty, who works until 21.