
Childcare costs fees are considered unsustainable for families in Wicklow according to experts
Childcare costs in County Wicklow, are on average €235.90 per week for one child in full-time care and 1,401 children are on waiting lists, according to latest Pobal figures for 2023/24.
In addition, a lack of available places is a major barrier for women to return to work and for their full participation in all aspects of society according to the National Woman's Council.
Ireland ranks in the top 3 countries in Europe for childcare costs. Country wide, there are more than 50,000 children under 4-years of age on waiting lists for places and thousands more on waiting lists for after-school/school-age childcare.
In last year’s Programme for Government, the government promised to cap childcare fees at €200 per month and to begin providing State-run services in communities facing the greatest childcare gaps.
NWC is now urging Government to use Budget 2026 – the first budget from the new Government – to deliver a transformative shift in Ireland’s early childhood education and care system.
This call is supported by over 40 civil society organisations who have come together in the Together for Public Alliance to campaign for a public system of early childhood education and care.
Orla O’Connor, Director of The National Women’s Council said;
“Families across the country are under enormous pressure, paying some of the highest childcare costs in Europe. Many are struggling to even secure a place. Our broken childcare system particularly affects women who are forced to make difficult decisions about their careers and lives. The Government has promised to tackle the crisis and must now deliver. Budget 2026 is a unique opportunity to invest in building a public system of early childhood education and care that is affordable for parents, values educators, and supports women and families. We want to see a system where every child who needs a place has access to one, just as children do in the primary school system.”
Donal Swan, Women’s Equality Co-ordinator at the National Women’s Council, said:
“Early childhood education and care should be treated as essential public infrastructure, not a luxury only for those who can afford it. The only way Ireland can meet its own targets and come in line with other EU countries is by moving away from a private, market-led model and building a truly public system. Recent media reports of crèche buildings lying idle in new housing estates show a unique opportunity for the State to step in, take these facilities on, and begin delivering childcare directly in the communities that need it most.”