2024 National Early Childhood Education and Care Workforce Census 

The fifth Early Childhood Education and Care National Workforce Census took place in 2024.

On this page:

Key findings

Workforce

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268,050 ECEC Workers
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173,738 with ECEC Quals
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91.2% were female

Children

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1,491,240 Children in care
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4.4% were first nations children
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19.3% spoke another language

About this report

The 2024 National Workforce Census provides a national overview of the early childhood education and care workforce.  

It collected information about:  

  • staff  
  • service usage  
  • children with additional needs  
  • access to preschool programs.  

The 2024 National Workforce Census builds on the results of earlier censuses and provides a useful picture of the early childhood education and care (ECEC) sector over time.  

Read the 2024 National Workforce Census Report  

Detailed findings

These key findings represent a snapshot of the ECEC sector during the reference week of the National Workforce Census (NWC).  

The self-reported data is from:

  • 97% of CCS services, and  
  • 67% of dedicated preschools nationally (excluding Western Australian dedicated preschools who did not participate in the 2024 NWC).

Workers

268,050 workers at ECEC services.

173,738 paid contact staff held a qualification in an ECEC field.

91.2% of the ECEC workforce was female.

Children

1,491,240 children aged 0 to 12 attended CCS-approved services. This is not a count of individual children, as children are not identified in NWC data and may attend more than one ECEC service.  

4.4% of all children attending CCS-approved services were Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.  

19.3% of all children attending CCS-approved services spoke a language other than English (LOTE) at home (or had parents/guardians who spoke a language other than English).