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Nurseries and childminders up and down the country will
be paid more from today for every government funded hour they
provide to parents.
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Hourly funding rates paid to local authorities have
increased from an average of £5.29 to £5.62 for three and
four-year-olds, and from an average of £6.00 to £7.95 for
two-year-olds.
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Further increases due next April, as part of rollout of
more free hours to parents, as government commits to making
sure childcare is affordable and accessible for all.
Nurseries and childminders will benefit from higher payment rates
from today (1 September), as part of the largest ever investment
in childcare in England.
The government has today increased the funding rates to local
authorities for both three- and four-year-olds and two year olds,
in a landmark moment for the early years sector.
The additional £204 million of funding is
providing a substantial uplift for local authorities to increase
hourly rates paid to early years providers for delivering the
government funded hours to parents.
Funding rates per child paid from today are increasing from an
average of £5.29 to £5.62 for three and four-year-olds, and from
an average of £6.00 to £7.95 for two-year-olds.
There will be a further increase in funding to come next year,
with the average rate paid to local authorities for 2024/25
anticipated to be set at £8.17 for two-year-olds and £11.06 for
under twos. This would make the average rate for under twos
almost double the average hourly fee of £5.68 charged to
parents.
Final 2024-25 hourly funding rates for local authorities for all
age groups will be confirmed in the autumn.
From April 2024, eligible working parents of two-year-olds will
get a new offer of 15 free hours per week of free childcare. From
September 2024, eligible parents will get 15 free hours from nine
months until their children start school, and from September
2025, they will get 30 free hours from nine months until the
start of school.
Parents whose children turn three this term can sign up for the
30 hours codes for the spring term, which starts from
1st January. The government is therefore urging every
parent to check now if they are
claiming the free childcare hours they
are entitled to, with national data showing almost one in five
eligible children may be missing out.
Minister for Children and Families said:
“This funding increase is another vital step in this government’s
work with the early years sector to deliver the flexible,
affordable, and quality childcare that parents need.
“With yet another increase in funding coming next year, we are
committed to supporting nurseries, childminders and everyone
working with children in their vital early years to deliver on
our biggest ever investment into childcare in England – set to
save a working parent using 30 hours of childcare up to an
average of £6,500 per year.”
Alongside funding and developing a national recruitment campaign,
the government is also supporting the early years workforce to
deliver the biggest ever investment in childcare in
England.
Funding rates have been set using insight gathered from surveying
10,000 providers up and down the country to understand their cost
pressures. In autumn 2023, it will look into how best to bring
down registration times for childminders from up to four months
to 10 weeks.