Choosing childcare is one of the most emotionally charged decisions a parent makes — and one of the most expensive. For a child under two, full-time care in England costs between £800 and £2,200 per month depending on the setting and location, according to Coram Family and Childcare's 2026 survey. The two main options — a nursery and a childminder — offer very different experiences for your child and very different practicalities for you.
This guide compares nurseries and childminders on cost, quality, flexibility, and what the research says about outcomes, using real UK data for 2026. This is general information, not a recommendation — every family and every child is different.
What a nursery offers
A day nursery (or private nursery) is a dedicated childcare setting, typically open 7:30 am to 6:00 pm, 51 weeks per year. Children are grouped by age — babies, toddlers, and preschoolers — with staff-to-child ratios set by the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) framework.
Nurseries provide:
- Structured early-years education following the EYFS curriculum, with qualified staff (at least one Level 3 practitioner per room, often an Early Years Teacher).
- Peer socialisation — a room of 12–24 children of similar age provides constant social interaction that a home setting cannot replicate.
- Reliability — if a staff member is ill, the nursery remains open. You are not dependent on one person's health.
- Inspection and regulation — all nurseries are registered and inspected by Ofsted (or the equivalent body in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland), with reports publicly available.
- Resources — outdoor play areas, sensory rooms, dedicated sleep rooms, and a rotating programme of activities that a home setting may not offer.
The downsides: nurseries are more expensive, can feel institutional (especially for very young babies), have fixed hours with little flexibility, and children are exposed to more illnesses due to the larger group size.
What a childminder offers
A registered childminder cares for children in their own home, typically alongside their own children if they have them. They are registered and inspected by Ofsted and must follow the same EYFS framework as nurseries, though the delivery looks different.
Childminders provide:
- A home-like environment — children are in a real home with a garden, pets, and mixed-age play that mirrors family life.
- Smaller group sizes — a maximum of six children under eight, with no more than three under five and one under one. This means more individual attention.
- Flexibility — many childminders offer early starts, late finishes, weekend care, and school pick-ups and drop-offs that nurseries do not.
- Lower cost — childminders are typically 30–40% cheaper than nurseries, partly because their overheads (their own home) are lower.
- Continuity of caregiver — your child builds a relationship with one consistent adult, which research on attachment suggests is beneficial, particularly for very young children.
The downsides: if the childminder is ill or on holiday, you need backup care — there is no staff team to cover. The social circle is smaller, and the range of activities and resources may be more limited than a well-equipped nursery.
Cost comparison: real 2026 UK figures
| Setting | Full-time (50 hrs/wk) — England average | Full-time — Inner London | Part-time (25 hrs/wk) — England average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nursery (under 2) | £1,450/month | £1,950/month | £800/month |
| Nursery (2–3 years) | £1,350/month | £1,800/month | £750/month |
| Nursery (3–5 years) | £1,200/month | £1,650/month | £650/month |
| Childminder (under 2) | £1,000/month | £1,400/month | £550/month |
| Childminder (2–5 years) | £950/month | £1,300/month | £500/month |
Source: Coram Family and Childcare 2026 survey. Costs are gross — the expanded 30-hours free childcare scheme reduces net costs for eligible families.
The childminder is consistently 30–40% cheaper. For a child under two in full-time care, that is a saving of roughly £450 per month, or £5,400 per year. In London, the saving is larger in absolute terms — roughly £550 per month, or £6,600 per year.
The "free hours" effect
The expanded 30-hours free childcare scheme, fully rolled out from September 2025, has changed the calculus. Eligible working parents of children aged 9 months to school age can claim 30 funded hours per week during term time (38 weeks per year). Both nurseries and registered childminders can offer the funded hours.
The free hours reduce the net cost significantly — but they do not eliminate it. Providers typically charge for meals, nappies, consumables, and hours beyond the funded entitlement. A "free" place may still cost £100–£300 per month in additional charges. And because the funding rate paid to providers by the government is often below their actual cost, some nurseries have limited the number of funded places they offer or introduced compulsory "enhancement" charges — a source of ongoing friction in the sector.
What the research says
The evidence on childcare quality and child outcomes does not point to one setting being universally better:
- The Effective Provision of Pre-School Education (EPPE) study, the largest UK longitudinal study of early years care, found that high-quality settings — whether nursery, childminder, or preschool — produce better cognitive and social outcomes. The quality of the caregiver-child interaction matters more than the type of setting.
- For very young children (under 18 months), some research on attachment suggests that a consistent one-to-one caregiver — more typical of a childminder setting — may be developmentally preferable, though the evidence is not conclusive.
- For children aged 3–5, the social and educational structure of a nursery or preschool group has measurable benefits for school readiness, particularly for children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
The consensus: quality matters more than setting type. Look for Ofsted ratings ("Good" or "Outstanding"), staff qualifications, low staff turnover, and — most importantly — how the caregivers interact with the children when you visit.
Head-to-head comparison
| Factor | Nursery | Childminder |
|---|---|---|
| Average monthly cost (under 2, full-time) | £1,450 | £1,000 |
| Group size | 12–24 children per room | Up to 6 children total |
| Adult-to-child ratio (under 2) | 1:3 | 1:3 (but smaller absolute group) |
| Hours | Fixed — typically 7:30–6:00 | Flexible — negotiable |
| Holiday cover | Open 51 weeks/year | Depends on childminder's holidays |
| Sickness cover | Setting stays open | You need backup if childminder is ill |
| Environment | Purpose-built, dedicated resources | Home setting, mixed-age play |
| Socialisation | Large peer group of same age | Small, mixed-age group |
| Ofsted inspection | Yes | Yes |
| EYFS curriculum | Delivered in group setting | Delivered in home setting |
| Best for | Structure, socialisation, reliability | Flexibility, home setting, individual attention |
Who each suits
Nursery suits:
- Parents with fixed working hours who need guaranteed, all-year-round care.
- Children who thrive on social interaction and structured group activities.
- Families who cannot afford a gap in care if a caregiver is ill — the nursery stays open.
- Parents who value the educational resources, outdoor space, and activity programmes of a dedicated setting.
Childminder suits:
- Parents with irregular or non-standard working hours who need flexibility.
- Very young children (under 18 months) who may benefit from a consistent one-to-one caregiver in a home environment.
- Families on a tighter budget — the 30–40% cost saving is substantial.
- Parents who want a family-style setting with mixed-age play and fewer children.
- Families with multiple children — a childminder can care for siblings together, simplifying drop-offs and pick-ups.
Practical tips for choosing
- Visit at least three settings of each type. Observe how staff interact with children — warm, responsive, and engaged caregivers matter more than shiny facilities.
- Check Ofsted reports online. Look beyond the overall rating to the detailed comments on teaching quality, safeguarding, and parent partnerships.
- Ask about staff turnover (nurseries) and backup arrangements (childminders). High turnover in a nursery is a red flag; a childminder with no sickness or holiday cover plan is a practical risk.
- Calculate the net cost after free hours, tax-free childcare (which gives 20% off childcare costs up to £2,000 per year per child), and any employer childcare vouchers you may still hold.
- Trust your instincts. If a setting feels wrong — even if you cannot articulate why — keep looking. You need to feel confident leaving your child there every day.
The bottom line
There is no universally "better" option between a nursery and a childminder — there is only the option that better fits your child and your family. Nurseries offer structure, socialisation, and reliability at a higher cost. Childminders offer flexibility, a home environment, and lower cost, but with less built-in resilience to illness and holiday closures.
The quality of the caregiver — their warmth, responsiveness, and qualifications — matters more than the type of setting. Visit both, check Ofsted reports, and choose the one where you feel most comfortable leaving your child. And remember: the decision is not permanent. What works for a 10-month-old may not be right for a 3-year-old, and switching settings as your child's needs change is entirely normal.