Licensed · State-verified

Licensed Daycare in New Jersey

Find the right daycare in New Jersey in under 5 minutes. 3,783 licensed centers — filter by age, cost, and subsidy. Verified weekly against NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing. Free, no signup.

3,783
Licensed Centers
$1,530/mo
Avg Infant Care
$1,100/mo
Avg Preschool
1:4
Infant Ratio

Listings updated May 2026 from official New Jersey licensing records.

New Jersey childcare by the numbers

3,783
Licensed providers
256,689
Licensed child seats
586
Cities & towns covered

New Jersey Childcare Licensing

In New Jersey, all child care centers serving children outside the family home are required to be licensed by the NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing. Licensed centers undergo background checks, capacity inspections, and routine compliance reviews.

Minimum staff-to-child ratios are 1:4 for infants under 12 months, 1:6 for toddlers (12–35 months), and 1:10 for preschool (3–5 years). NAEYC-accredited centers typically operate below the state minimum.

Infant
: 1:4
Toddler
: 1:6
Preschool
: 1:10
Verify a license at NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing

What's distinctive about New Jersey: New Jersey's Abbott District preschools (free pre-K in 35 high-poverty districts) consistently outperform national averages — apply if you live in one. Standard daycare runs $1,500+/mo.

Quick licensing facts

Regulator
NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing
Infant ratio
1:4
Toddler ratio
1:6
Preschool ratio
1:10
Avg infant cost
$1,530/mo
Avg preschool cost
$1,100/mo

New Jersey Daycare Costs by Age (2026)

Infant (0–12 mo)1:4 $1,530/mo
Toddler (1–3 yr)1:6 $1,320/mo
Preschool (3–5 yr)1:10 $1,100/mo
School-age (before/after) $610/mo

Infant care in New Jersey runs about $18,360/year. Family daycare homes typically cost 10–30% less than centers; Head Start is free for income-eligible families. Toddler & school-age figures are estimates derived from New Jersey center averages.

Estimate your exact cost

How to Get Childcare Help in New Jersey

  1. 1
    Check eligibility for NJ Child Care Subsidy Program (DFD). Most New Jersey families earning up to ~85% of state median income qualify for childcare subsidy assistance.
  2. 2
    Apply early — waitlists are common. Quality infant programs in New Jersey often have 3–12 month waitlists. Start during pregnancy if you can. Intake line: (800) 332-9227.
  3. 3
    Stack federal help. The Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit (20–35% of up to $6,000) and a Dependent Care FSA ($5,000 pre-tax) apply regardless of state subsidy.
  4. 4
    Verify the license before you sign. Confirm current status in the NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing database and tour during operating hours.
Financial help

New Jersey Childcare Subsidies & Tax Credits

New Jersey families can apply for NJ Child Care Subsidy Program (DFD) based on income and work/school status. Federal programs — the Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit, Dependent Care FSA ($5,000 cap), and Head Start — stack on top of state assistance.

Local intake line: (800) 332-9227

Check Subsidy Eligibility Estimate Your Cost

Daycare in New Jersey — Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know a daycare in New Jersey is licensed?
Every center listed here is verified against the NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing database. Look for the 'Licensed' badge on each profile. You can also confirm directly via the agency's lookup tool at https://nj.childcareaware.org/families/find-child-care/.
What is the staff-to-child ratio in New Jersey?
State minimums in New Jersey are roughly 1:4 infants, 1:6 toddlers, and 1:10 preschool. NAEYC-accredited centers typically operate below these ceilings.
How much does daycare cost in New Jersey?
Full-time infant care averages about $1530/month; preschool runs around $1100/month. Costs vary by city — large metros like New Jersey trend higher than rural areas.
Are subsidies available for childcare in New Jersey?
Yes. The primary state program is NJ Child Care Subsidy Program (DFD), reachable at (800) 332-9227. Federal options like Head Start, the Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit, and Dependent Care FSA also apply. See our subsidies guide for eligibility rules.
How do I report unsafe conditions at a New Jersey daycare?
File a complaint with the NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing via their website. Inspections are public record; severe violations result in license suspension.

Where to get childcare help in New Jersey

Free, official channels for finding licensed care, checking quality ratings, and applying for assistance — no account or fee required.

Local CCR&R agency

Child Care Resource & Referral counselors help you find vetted local options.

1-800-424-2246 · Find yours
Dial 2-1-1

United Way's free, confidential line connects you to local childcare, food, and family aid.

Call 211 · 211.org
Head Start (free)

Free early education for income-eligible families and pregnant women.

Find a program
State subsidy

NJ Child Care Subsidy Program (DFD) can cover most of your childcare cost by income.

(800) 332-9227 · How to apply
Quality ratings

Check NAEYC accreditation and your state's quality-rating (QRIS) for any provider.

Find quality care
Verify a license

Confirm any provider's current license & inspection record with NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of Licensing.

Official license search

How this data is sourced. Listings for New Jersey are compiled from official NJ Department of Children and Families — Office of 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 3,783 Licensed New Jersey Centers

Free, no signup, filter by age and subsidy acceptance.

selected