Child Care in Alabama: A Roadmap to Support Alabama’s Parents, Children, Employers and Providers
Through a collaborative project led by Alabama Partnership for Children, Alabama School Readiness Alliance, and VOICES for Alabama’s Children, the Alabama child care landscape report, Child Care in Alabama: A Roadmap to Support Alabama’s Parents, Children, Employers and Economy is now available. This comprehensive report outlines short- and long-term recommendations for improving child care in Alabama. This report was created with data received from focus groups, work groups, and over 20 years of child care studies. We are excited to share these recommendations with you at the link below.
Click here to view Child Care in Alabama: A Roadmap to Support Alabama’s Parents, Children, Employers and Economy.
Alabama Child Care: Roadmap Project
Alabama’s Child Care Roadmap Project includes child care mapping to better understand the current supply of child care throughout the state. The maps also show Head Start and Early Head Start programs.
- Each map can be viewed from a statewide perspective, or you can zoom in to see counties, communities or neighborhoods.
- A legend is available for each map to describe the type of program shown (licensed centers, licensed family child care homes and group family child care homes, etc.).
Your view of the interactive maps below can be customized by checking or unchecking the features you would like to see.
Child Care Centers
Offering Infant Care
Click here to see child care centers that offer infant care in Alabama.
Licensed Family Child Care Homes and Group Child Care Homes
Click here to see licensed family child care homes and group child care homes in Alabama.
Licensed Family Child Care Homes and Group Child Care Homes
Click here to see licensed family child care homes and group child care homes. Click on “content” in the left-hand column once you open the map. Click off the layer related to working parents. Click ont he layer related to poverty, which will reset the background color to red shading.
Head Start and Early
Head Start Programs
Click here to see Head Start and Early Head Start programs in Alabama.
Child Care Centers Participating in the Child & Adult Care Food Program
Click here to see licensed child care centers participating in the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) — the federal food program that reimburses child care programs for nutritious meals and snacks.
All Programs
Participating in Quality
STARS Rated 2-5
Click here to see all programs participating in Quality STARS Rated 2- 5 (May 2023)
Child Care Centers
Participating in Quality
STARS Rated 2-5
Click here to see child care centers participating in Quality STARS Rated 2- 5 (May 2023)
Group & Family Child Care Homes
Participating in Quality
STARS Rated 2-5
Click here to see Group homes and Family Child Care homes participating in Quality STARS Rated 2- 5 (May 2023)
Star ratings within the maps are color coded by rating
License Exempt Programs
Serving Children with a
Child Care Subsidy
Click here to see license exempt programs serving children whose care is paid for with a subsidy in Alabama.
Licensed child care programs by neighborhoods where Spanish
is spoken at home
Click here to see child care centers and licensed family child care homes and group homes against a background layer showing neighborhoods where Spanish is spoken at home.
Alabama First Class Pre-K Programs
Click here to see the locations of Alabama First Class Pre-K by type of organization (public school, private child care center, Head Start, etc.).
All Child Care Programs
Click here to see all child care programs in Alabama. It takes a few minutes for all the variables to load. Visitors may want to unclick all the layer options (types of child care) once the map fully loads (click “content” on the left-hand side to click or unclick variables), and click on each layer you want to add to the map. Zoom in to check out your neighborhood!
Alabama Child Care Supply Gap
Click here to see the child care supply gap for children under age 6 in Alabama by county. The gap in each county is presented by the percentage gap between supply and potential need as well as by the slot shortage estimate. In addition, the annual economic impact the supply shortage has on each county is listed. The data is from a 35-state analysis conducted by the Bipartisan Policy Center.
Sources: Alabama Department of Human Resources, Alabama Department of Education, U.S. Census Bureau 2021 American Community Survey, 1 Year Estimates.