The cost of guessing
That's what most parents spend on daycare application fees before they know which provider is right. 8–12 applications at $50–$200 each. Most go nowhere.
The $800 is the number you can count. The cost you can't count is the 7 weeks of evenings spent filling out applications, the Saturday mornings spent touring places you could have eliminated in 10 minutes, and the mental bandwidth you burned on logistics instead of your kid. That's 7 weeks of bedtime stories, park trips, and naps on the couch you don't get back. The childcare search already takes enough from you. Don't let it take more than it has to.
The fee isn't paying for processing.
It's paying for your lack of information.
Here's what the childcare search looks like for most parents: you Google daycares in your neighborhood, find 10–15 that seem reasonable, and start submitting applications. Each one charges $50–$200 just to get on their waitlist. You don't know much about any of them. You're hoping that if you cast a wide enough net, something will work out.
Three months and $800 later, you've heard back from four. Two don't have spots for your child's age group. One has a red flag you would have caught if you'd done 20 minutes of research. The fourth is fine, but it's your fourth choice—and you're out of time, so you take it.
This is how most families find childcare. Not because they're careless, but because no one gives them a better system.
Let's be honest about what application fees actually are. They're not processing fees—it doesn't cost $150 to add a name to a list. They're not quality signals—some of the best home daycares charge nothing, while mediocre chain centers charge $200. And they don't guarantee anything—you can pay $150 and wait 18 months without hearing a word.
Application fees exist because providers know parents are anxious and have no way to compare options. When you can't tell which programs are actually good, you apply everywhere. When you apply everywhere, every program can charge you for the privilege.
What application fees actually cover:
Administrative revenue for the provider. That's it. Some providers use it to filter out parents who aren't serious, which is fair—but there are better ways to show you're serious than blindly paying $150 to eight different places.
Not every provider charges an application fee, and the ones that don't aren't worse. In fact, some of the highest-quality programs—particularly co-ops and smaller home daycares—don't charge any application fee because they fill through relationships and word of mouth, not waitlist management software.
The parents who find great childcare without burning money all follow the same pattern, whether they realize it or not. They research before they spend. Here's the system:
Step 1
Before you spend a dollar or make a phone call, eliminate 80% of providers. Most won't be right for your family—wrong age range, wrong price, wrong neighborhood, wrong philosophy. You don't need to tour a Montessori if you know your kid needs something more structured. You don't need to apply to a place that costs $3,200/month if your budget is $2,000.
Check inspection records. Look at staff-to-child ratios. Understand the actual price range, not just the number on a website (some programs charge separately for meals, supplies, and extended hours). Read reviews from parents who've actually been there.
This is what Shortlist does. Every provider scored, categorized, and compared—inspections, pricing, staff data, editorial reviews. One place instead of 15 browser tabs.
Time: 1–2 hours · Cost: Free
Step 2
Once you've narrowed to a handful, pick up the phone or stop by. A 10-minute call tells you more than any website. You're checking three things:
Your 10-minute phone script:
"Hi, I'm looking for childcare for my [age] starting around [date]. I have a few quick questions:"
If they seem annoyed by these questions, that tells you everything you need to know.
Pro tip: Dropping by unannounced during the day is the single best thing you can do. Tours are staged. A random Tuesday at 10am shows you what it actually looks like—noise level, staff energy, how kids are being treated when no one's watching.
Time: 1–2 days of calls · Cost: $0
Step 3
You've done the research. You've talked to them. Now you're visiting 3 providers you already know are a strong fit—not 8 providers you're hoping might work out.
On the tour, stop looking at the art on the walls and the fancy lobby. Pay attention to what matters:
Time: 3 tours across 1 week · Cost: $0
Step 4
Now you pay the application fee. Not before. You're applying to providers you've researched, spoken with, visited, and feel confident about. You're not guessing. You're choosing.
If your top choice has a waitlist, apply there and to your second choice. That's it. Two applications, two fees. Not ten.
If a provider won't let you tour before applying—that's a red flag. Good programs want you to see what they do. Programs that require payment before they'll show you anything are telling you something about their priorities.
Time: 30 minutes · Cost: $100–$200
Some providers, especially popular ones, require an application fee before they'll schedule a tour or add you to the waitlist. This is frustrating but increasingly common. Here's how to handle it:
The application fees are the obvious cost. But the hidden cost is worse: ending up somewhere that's not right.
Switching daycares is brutal. Your child adjusts to one environment, bonds with teachers, makes friends—and then you move them because you realize the inspection record is concerning, or the staff turnover is constant, or the "Montessori" program is just a regular daycare with wooden toys.
Parents who research first don't just save money on application fees. They make better decisions. And the decision you make about who takes care of your child 40+ hours a week is worth getting right the first time.
average savings vs. apply-first
Every provider in your city—scored, reviewed, and compared. Inspections, pricing, staff data, availability, and honest editorial reviews. For less than the cost of two application fees.
Full refund if it doesn't help. No questions.