Licensed Daycare in Cincinnati, Ohio
84 licensed daycares in Cincinnati, verified weekly. Compare cost, age groups, and Head Start spots in your ZIP — directly from official Ohio licensing records.
Cincinnati listings updated May 2026 from official Ohio records.
Daycare in Cincinnati: what parents should know
Our directory lists 84 licensed childcare providers in Cincinnati, Ohio. Every provider here holds a current Ohio license at indexing time, sourced from Ohio Department of Children and Youth — Child Care Licensing.
For age coverage, 9 centers in Cincinnati report infant care (roughly 11% — infant slots are the scarcest and fill fastest, so start early), and 10 offer preschool programs for ages 3–5. 11 are Head Start programs, free for income-eligible families.
Licensed care in Cincinnati spans 8+ ZIP codes, so families can usually find an option within a short commute. About 11% are family child care homes — typically smaller group sizes and 10–30% cheaper than centers, a good fit for infants and toddlers.
Combined, Cincinnati's licensed centers hold about 5,804 licensed seats — a practical gauge of how much local supply competes for each opening.
Cincinnati childcare by the numbers
The Cincinnati childcare landscape
Cincinnati voters chose to fund preschool themselves: the Cincinnati Preschool Promise provides tuition help so families can afford quality preschool across the city. Layered on Ohio's Step Up to Quality system, it makes quality preschool more reachable than in most Ohio cities.
Cincinnati Preschool Promise and free pre-K
The voter-funded Cincinnati Preschool Promise (CPP) provides tuition assistance for 3- and 4-year-olds to attend quality-rated preschools across the city, alongside Cincinnati Public Schools preschool and federal Head Start. For many Cincinnati families, CPP plus a provider's quality rating largely determines what preschool costs.
Subsidies and quality (Step Up to Quality)
Ohio's subsidy is Publicly Funded Child Care (PFCC), administered through Hamilton County Job & Family Services for eligible working and in-school families. Check a provider's Step Up to Quality star rating — Ohio's quality system — since CPP tuition help is tied to quality-rated programs.
How licensing works
Child care in Ohio is licensed and inspected by the state (early-childhood oversight is consolidating under the Department of Children and Youth). Licensing status and inspection history are public — confirm a provider is licensed and in good standing before enrolling.
Neighborhoods and cost
Cincinnati is affordable for a major metro — full-time infant care commonly runs $1,000–$1,300/month. Hyde Park, Oakley, and Mount Lookout are family-dense and competitive; the West Side and the urban core carry more community-based and subsidized options.
When to start looking
Apply for the Cincinnati Preschool Promise and district pre-K ahead of the fall — check in spring. For infant care, tour early and join waitlists.
Childcare costs in Cincinnati
ChildCare Aware reports the Ohio average full-time cost at $920/month for infant care and $700/month for preschool. City-level prices in Cincinnati vary by ZIP code and program model — Head Start sites are free for eligible families, family daycare homes typically run 10-30% below center rates, and accredited centers run above the average.
The Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit and a Dependent Care FSA ($5,000 max) reduce effective cost regardless of program. Ohio families may also qualify for Publicly Funded Child Care (PFCC) (intake: (866) 886-3537).
Full Ohio licensing & cost overviewQuick facts
- State regulator
- Ohio Department of Children and Youth — Child Care Licensing
- Infant ratio
- 1:5
- Toddler ratio
- 1:7
- Preschool ratio
- 1:14
- Avg capacity
- 69 kids
Largest licensed centers in Cincinnati
By licensed capacity on file — bigger programs often mean more openings and age groups. Always verify the current license before enrolling.
All Cincinnati licensed centers
Page 3 of 6Tap any card to view the full listing including the state license number, capacity, and inspection history when available.
Parent-asked basics on licensing, ratios, and waitlist timing for this area.
How many licensed daycare centers are in Cincinnati, Ohio?
What's the average daycare cost in Cincinnati?
What staff-to-child ratios apply in Cincinnati daycares?
Are subsidies available for daycare in Cincinnati?
How do I verify a Cincinnati daycare's license?
Where to get childcare help in Cincinnati
Free, official channels for finding licensed care, checking quality ratings, and applying for assistance — no account or fee required.
Child Care Resource & Referral counselors help you find vetted local options.
1-800-424-2246 · Find yoursUnited Way's free, confidential line connects you to local childcare, food, and family aid.
Call 211 · 211.orgFree early education for income-eligible families and pregnant women.
Find a programPublicly Funded Child Care (PFCC) can cover most of your childcare cost by income.
(866) 886-3537 · How to applyCheck NAEYC accreditation and your state's quality-rating (QRIS) for any provider.
Find quality careConfirm any provider's current license & inspection record with Ohio Department of Children and Youth — Child Care Licensing.
Official license searchChildcare resources for Cincinnati
Data and guidance on this page draw on official government and nonprofit sources.
How this data is sourced. Listings for Cincinnati, Ohio are compiled from official Ohio Department of Children and Youth — Child Care Licensing licensing records and cross-checked for current license status — not paid placements or user star-ratings. Rankings never depend on advertising. Provider details change often, so always confirm directly before enrolling. Reviewed by the DaycareHub editorial team · May 2026 · methodology
Search 84 Licensed Centers in Cincinnati
Free, no signup, verified directly with Ohio Department of Children and Youth — Child Care Licensing.