NEW TO SEATTLE
Seattle's tech boom brings thousands of new families every year. If you just got here, you don't have a neighbor to ask which daycare is actually good, which waitlists are real, or what the WA DCYF inspection records say. Here's what local parents already know.
Get the Seattle childcare starter guide.
Costs, waitlist timelines, neighborhood breakdowns, and what to do first.
Pricing reality
Infant care in Seattle runs $1,500–$3,100/month. Home daycares tend to cost 20–30% less than centers. Eastside (Bellevue, Kirkland) trends slightly higher. Toddler and preschool rates drop, but not as much as you'd expect.
Waitlist truth
Popular neighborhoods (Green Lake, Wallingford, Queen Anne) have 3–12 month waitlists for infant spots. Many parents sign up during pregnancy. Toddler spots turn over faster, especially mid-year when families move.
Where to look
Green Lake, Wallingford, Queen Anne, and Phinney Ridge have the highest concentration of providers. The Eastside (Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond) has strong options too, especially Montessori and language immersion programs.
Provider types
Seattle has large centers, home daycares (up to 16 kids with waivers), Montessori, co-ops, and preschools. Home daycares are popular here and often have shorter waitlists and more flexible schedules than centers.
State licensing
Washington's Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) licenses and inspects all providers. Inspection records are public but hard to find and harder to read. Shortlist pulls them and summarizes findings in plain English.
The application trap
Many Seattle programs charge $50–$200 application fees. Applying to 8–10 programs (common for infant care) adds up fast. Research first, apply selectively.
Tools & Guides
Start your search with these—no account needed.
New
Answer 4 questions and find out which type of childcare fits your family best. 2 minutes.
Calculator
Two programs charging the same tuition can cost wildly different amounts per hour of actual care.
Most Popular
Enter your home and work addresses. See which neighborhoods make sense for your search.
Reference
Most families spend $1,000+ on application fees alone. A research-first approach cuts that to $300.
Checklist
20 questions to ask at every tour so you actually compare programs instead of just vibing.
Decision Guide
The real cost comparison, flexibility trade-offs, and developmental differences.
Don't search blind.
Get the starter guide with Seattle-specific costs, timelines, and neighborhood breakdowns.
Send them this page—it's the cheat sheet they don't know they need.
Every Seattle daycare, preschool, and home childcare—researched, scored, and compared.
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