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DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026

How much does a nursery baby room place cost in the UK?

The baby room is where the youngest children go, usually up to around two years old, and it is nearly always the most expensive nursery band. The reason is simple, because babies need more staff per child, and those ratios push the price up. A full-time baby room place is often the single biggest childcare bill a family will ever pay.

The quick version

  • Baby room places cost the most because staff look after fewer babies each.
  • A full-time place is priced per month and often lands above the family mortgage or rent.
  • Funded hours used to start later, but support has been widening to reach under-threes for eligible working parents.
  • Nappies, formula and food are commonly billed on top, and babies get through a lot of them.
  • Prices ease once a child moves up to an older room with higher ratios.

What people actually paid

List priceActually paid
£0£998£1,996£2,994list med £1,355paid med £800List priceActually paid

The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)

List price (advertised)£1,3554 prices
£555 less
Actually paid (reported)£8001 price

People reported paying 41% less than the advertised list price for baby room (full-time).

List price£1,355Actually paid£800

List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.

Why the price varies so much

Baby room prices vary most on age, ratios and location. The staffing rules mean fewer babies per adult than in older rooms, and that cost sits at the heart of the fee. Where you live changes the picture sharply, with London and the South East far above the rest of the country. Then there are the extras, since nappies, formula and food add up quickly for a baby, and nurseries differ on whether these are included or charged separately. All of this means two baby room places with a similar headline fee can work out quite differently once everything is added in.

How to pay less

  • Check the funded hours for under-threes, since eligible working parents can now claim support earlier than the old age-three start.
  • Use a Tax-Free Childcare account to add a government top-up to what you pay.
  • Compare a childminder for the baby years, as hourly rates often beat a nursery baby room.
  • Ask if you can send in your own nappies and formula rather than paying the nursery to supply them.
  • Look at whether stretching funded hours across the year lowers the monthly figure once your child qualifies.
  • See if the Universal Credit childcare element applies, as it can refund much of the cost for lower-income working families.

Common questions

Why is the baby room the most expensive part of nursery?

Babies need closer supervision, so the number of children each member of staff can look after is small. Wages are the biggest cost a nursery has, and a low ratio means those wages are spread across fewer fees, which pushes the price up.

Can I get funded hours for a baby?

Funded support has been widening to reach under-threes for eligible working parents, so it is worth checking the current rules for your child's exact age. The old assumption that funding starts at three no longer tells the whole story.

Is a childminder cheaper than a nursery baby room?

Usually yes for the youngest children. Childminders charge by the hour and often come in under a nursery baby room, though some families still prefer a nursery for the wider group setting and longer opening hours.

What baby extras should I expect to pay for?

Nappies, wipes, formula and food are the common ones, and a baby gets through plenty. Ask whether you can bring your own, because supplying these yourself can shave a fair amount off the monthly bill.

Sources and method

The prices in this guide come from 9 real data points for baby room (full-time), each listed and linked on the baby room (full-time) page. Context is drawn from published nursery fees and national childcare surveys. We do not estimate prices, and no sponsor can influence a number. Last updated July 2026.

This guide is general information about UK childcare pricing, not financial advice.