28/02/2026
The child care conversation in America has gotten so absurd that the numbers barely sound real anymore.
According to a LendingTree analysis published in January, the average annual cost of care for an infant and a 4 year old is now $28,190.
Under the federal affordability guideline, child care is considered affordable only if it takes up no more than 7% of household income.
That means a family with two young kids would need to earn $402,708 a year for child care to be considered “comfortable” by that standard.
Now compare that to what families actually make.
The average household with two kids earns $145,656. That is not a small gap. That means the income needed to hit the affordability benchmark is 176.5% higher than what the typical two child household brings in.
In plain English, even families who look solidly middle class or upper middle class on paper are still getting hammered by child care costs.
This is where a lot of financial advice falls apart in the real world.
People love to say, “Just budget better.”
“Cut back.”
“Stop wasting money.”
But when one line item is this big, the issue is not a family buying too much takeout or grabbing coffee on the way to work. The issue is that one of the most basic costs of raising a family has exploded so far beyond normal income levels that it is forcing impossible tradeoffs.
Families are not just adjusting. They are delaying saving, investing less, carrying more stress, and in many cases making career decisions based on survival instead of opportunity. LendingTree’s own analysis notes that these costs leave less room for saving, paying off debt, investing, and covering other core financial priorities.
And the burden is not shared evenly.
LendingTree found that American Indian households with two children earn an average of $94,094, while Black households average $98,019.
To meet that same affordability threshold, those families would need to earn 328.0% and 310.8% more, respectively. That is not just expensive. That is structurally broken.