Federal law requires that states have policies in place to protect the health and safety of children in child care in three areas:

Because these federal requirements are general, the standards that states set for licensing child care centers and family child care homes vary greatly. The rules on who must obtain a license, what training they need to have, how many children they can care for, and what kind of environment they must provide differ state by state. On this page you will find information about what different standards mean, as well as tables that show how your state's child care rules compare with the rest of the country.

Child Care Center and Small Family Child Care Home Standards and Oversight

NACCRRA reviewed state child care center policies and regulations and ranked the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) based on a set of key benchmarks. The results are shown on state scorecards and underscore the need to improve child care regulations across the nation.

We Can Do Better: Child Care Centers Leaving Children to Chance:Small Family Child Care Homes

One Page Summary

One Page Summary
Press Release Press Release
Executive Summary Executive Summary
Scorecards Scorecards
Full Report Full Report
State by State Profiles State by State Profiles: Alabama – Nebraska
All Center report related materials State by State Profiles: Nevada - Wyoming
Recommendations
All FCC home report related materials