Child Care Subsidy data report – March quarter 2023

This report provides a snapshot of Child Care Subsidy (CCS) approved care over the March quarter 2023.

On this page:

Key findings

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Infographics March Children in Care
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Infographic March Families using Care
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Infographics March Approved Services
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Infographics March Average Weekly Usage
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Infographics March Average Hourly Fee
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Infographics March Total Subsidies

About this report

The March quarter 2023 report includes data on:

  • the number of children and families using approved care 
  • the number and types of approved services
  • the cost of care
  • total government subsidies.

The report covers the four approved care types that administer CCS.

In Home Care has been excluded from all service type, state and usage analysis for privacy reasons.

Download the full data tables

Learn about the data, including sources, definitions and technical notes

Detailed findings

Children

1,495,160 children from 1,064,910 families attended a CCS approved service.

1,419,150 children from 995,350 families were allocated a Customer Reference Number (CRN) by Services Australia, up 6.3% from the March quarter 2022. The remainder of this report analyses this cohort.

49.9% of children aged 0 to 5 and 34.5% of children aged 0 to 12 used approved care.

Of children in care:

  • 59.3% (841,510 children) attended Centre Based Day Care
  • 39.7% (563,010 children) attended Outside School Hours Care
  • 5.6% (79,990 children) attended Family Day Care.

New South Wales had the largest share of children attending approved care, at 33.0% or 467,980 children. New South Wales also had the largest proportional increase, at 9.7% or 41,410 children.

40,430 children accessed Additional Child Care Subsidy.

State or territory Percentage of children using approved care
New South Wales 33.0
Victoria 24.0
Queensland 22.8
South Australia 6.7
Western Australia 8.9
Tasmania 1.7
Northern Territory 0.8
Australian Capital Territory 2.3

Download the full data tables

60,240 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children attended approved care, up 8.8% from the March quarter 2022.

New South Wales had the largest share of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children attending approved care, at 37.9%.

The majority of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children using care attended Centre Based Day Care, at 68.4%. This compares with 59.3% for all children in care.

30.5% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children using approved care attended Outside School Hours Care, compared to 39.7% of all children.

Care type All children Indigenous children
Centre Based Day Care 59.3 68.4
Family Day Care 5.6 4.9
Outside School Hours Care 39.7 30.5

Download the full data tables

Families

995,350 families used approved care, up 5.0% from the March quarter 2022.

The number of families using Centre Based Day Care increased by 2.1% (13,930 families). The number of families using Outside School Hours Care increased by 15.4% (55,130 families).

New South Wales had the largest share of families using Centre Based Day Care, at 32.7% (222,500 families).

28,370 families accessed Additional Child Care Subsidy.

State or territory Percentage of families using Centre Based Day Care
New South Wales 32.7
Victoria 25.4
Queensland 22.3
South Australia 6.0
Western Australia 9.1
Tasmania 1.7
Northern Territory 0.9
Australian Capital Territory 2.1

Download the full data tables

Services

14,382 approved services operated during the quarter.

Centre Based Day Care services represented 62.5% of all services, with 8,983 services. Outside School Hours Care services represented 34.5% of all services, with 4,965 services.

Compared to the March quarter 2022:

  • the number of Centre Based Day Care services increased by 2.4% (213 services)
  • the number of Outside School Hours Care increased by 3.2% (154 services)
  • the number of Family Day Care decreased by -4.1% (-17 services).
Care type Percentage of approved services
Centre Based Day Care 62.5
Family Day Care 2.8
Outside School Hours Care 34.5
In Home Care 0.2

Download the full data tables

Usage

On average, children attended 26.7 hours of care per week, up 0.3% from the March quarter 2022.

Of Centre Based Day Care services:

  • Northern Territory had the highest average weekly hours, at 38.2 hours
  • Tasmania had the lowest average weekly hours, at 26.6 hours.
State or territory Average weekly hours
New South Wales 32.8
Victoria 32.9
Queensland 35.2
South Australia 29.5
Western Australia 29.3
Tasmania 26.6
Northern Territory 38.2
Australian Capital Territory 33.9
Australia 32.9

Download the full data tables

Fees

The average hourly fee was $11.45, up 6.5% from the March quarter 2022.

Outside School Hours Care had the lowest average hourly fee at $8.30 per hour. Centre Based Day Care had the highest at $12.00 per hour.

Care type Average hourly fee
Centre Based Day Care 12
Family Day Care 11.85
Outside School Hours Care 8.3
Total 11.45

Download the full data tables

The hourly rate cap for children below school age at Centre Based Day Care services was $12.74. With the exception of the Australian Capital Territory ($13.40), all states and territories had average hourly fees below the hourly rate cap for Centre Based Day Care.

Nationally, 73.3% of Centre Based Day Care services had an average hourly fee under or at the hourly fee cap. This compares to 85.3% in Outside School Hours Care under a fee cap of $11.15, and 51.6% under a cap of $11.80 in Family Day Care.

Data on Centre Based Day Care hourly fees by Statistical Area Level 3 (SA3) shows that the regions with the highest hourly fees are typically located in parts of Sydney, Perth, Melbourne and Canberra.

State or territory Average hourly fee
New South Wales 12.25
Victoria 12.2
Queensland 11.45
South Australia 11.75
Western Australia 12.2
Tasmania 10.85
Northern Territory 10.95
Australian Capital Territory 13.4
Australia 12

Download the full data tables

Subsidies

The total estimated expenditure by the Australian Government was $2.69 billion. This includes Child Care Subsidy and Additional Child Care Subsidy.

Additional Child Care Subsidy accounted for $137.2million of this.

The total estimated expenditure was up 18.6% from the March quarter 2022.

The majority of Child Care Subsidy went to families using Centre Based Day Care, at $2.26 billion or 84.1%.

9.7% went to families using Outside School Hours Care.

Care type Estimated Child Care Subsidy
Centre Based Day Care 84.1
Family Day Care 5.9
Outside School Hours Care 9.7
In Home Care 0.3