High quality early childhood education and care (ECEC) gives children the best start in life. Access to affordable care means parents and carers can work, train, study and volunteer.
On this page:
What does the Australian Government do?
Child Care Subsidy
The Australian Government, through the Department of Education and Services Australia, administers the Child Care Subsidy (CCS). CCS is generally paid to providers who pass it on to families as a fee reduction. Providers must be approved by the department to receive CCS. The department is also responsible for the legislation that underpins CCS.
This legislation is called Family Assistance Law (FAL). All providers that receive CCS must follow the rules under FAL. The department monitors providers’ compliance with FAL.
Services Australia provides frontline services so families can receive CCS. Services Australia is responsible for the general administration of CCS including processing claims, enrolments and payments, and communicating with families.
More information for providers
Grants and extra support
The department also runs grant programs for disadvantaged, regional, remote and Indigenous communities.
Learn more about extra support
Preschool
The Australian Government funds states and territories to deliver preschool. The department delivers this through a funding agreement. Preschool is available to children in the year before school.
Closing the Gap
We’re investing in measures to improve the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children through better access to quality early childhood education and care.
What do state and territory governments do?
National Quality Framework
State and territory governments are responsible for the health, safety, wellbeing and educational outcomes of children.
State-based education departments do this under National Law through the National Quality Framework (NQF). The NQF sets the rules for how education and care is delivered to children. The NQF includes two nationally approved learning frameworks that support and promote children’s learning.
Providers must be approved by their state government to deliver the NQF.
The Australian Children’s Education and Care Quality Authority (ACECQA) is an independent national authority that helps administer the NQF.
Equity, inclusion and diversity underpin the NQF. We have information and resources to help ECEC services ensure every child can access, participate meaningfully in, and experience positive outcomes from ECEC.
Find your state or territory education department
Preschool
State and territory governments are responsible for delivering preschool services.
What do providers and services do?
Providers and services deliver CCS-eligible education and care to children and families.
The provider is the entity, or organisation, that holds approval to deliver ECEC services. The provider is legally responsible for correctly administering FAL and National Law.
Providers can be for-profit, non-profit, community based or government run.
The service delivers ECEC direct to children and families. There are 4 care types eligible for CCS:
- Centre Based Day Care
- Family Day Care
- Outside School Hours Care
- In Home Care.
Providers can deliver a range of CCS-eligible services. A provider can also be a service.
Learn more about approved care types
What is early childhood education and care?
ECEC instils social, physical, emotional, personal, creative, and cognitive learning in children. It’s delivered by qualified educators through a formalised learning framework.
Generally, it covers the age range 0 to school age.
Quality ECEC helps with healthy early childhood development and prepares children for school.
Who works in early childhood education?
Depending on the care type, people who work in ECEC services include:
- early childhood teachers
- early childhood educators
- educational leaders
- support staff like cooks and cleaners
- directors and managers.
Quality outcomes for children depend on a highly skilled, well-supported and professionally recognised ECEC workforce.
In 2021, ACECQA released the National Children’s Education and Care Workforce Strategy 2022–2031. The strategy aims to foster a sustainable and high-quality workforce of early childhood teachers and educators over the next 10 years.
Why is early childhood education and care so important?
ECEC benefits children, families and the Australian economy.
Quality ECEC:
- lays the foundation for lifelong development and learning
- leads to better health, education and employment outcomes later in life.
Children who attend preschool are generally better prepared to start primary school.
Access to affordable ECEC means parents and carers can work, train, study and volunteer. This in turn boosts Australia’s economy.
What does the data say about early childhood education and care?
We issue public reports about ECEC in Australia. We:
- issue quarterly reports about usage, services, fees and subsidies
- conduct a national workforce census every 3 years
- conduct a nationwide census to measure how children have developed by the time they start school every 3 years.
How to find early childhood education and care
Families can find and compare all ECEC services on StartingBlocks.gov.au