A Daycare Center’s revenue starts with licensed places, occupancy, age mix, tuition, billable days, and registration fees. In Year 1, 45 places at 60% occupancy means about 27 occupied places; with infant tuition at $1,800, toddler at $1,600, preschool at $1,400, and 20 billable days, the model shows about $840k in monthly tuition billings before fees. That is revenue, not owner income, because payroll, rent, food, supplies, insurance, reserves, and taxes still come out.
Revenue drivers
45 licensed places set the ceiling
60% occupancy means 27 filled spots
Age mix changes tuition per child
Registration fees add upfront cash
What revenue misses
20 billable days drive billing math
Modeled tuition reaches about $840k
Payroll and rent still cut hard
Food, supplies, insurance, and taxes follow
How much can a daycare owner make?
A Daycare Center owner-operator can make about $212k in Year 1 if they also fill the director role: $137k EBITDA plus a $75k director salary. For the operating metric behind that profit path, see What Is The Most Important Metric To Measure The Success Of The Little Learners Daycare Center?; a passive owner’s true take-home is lower because paid management must replace that role.
Owner-operator
$137k Year 1 modeled EBITDA
$75k director salary counted
$212k Year 1 economic income
Before taxes, debt, reserves, distributions
Passive owner
Must pay a center director
Take-home is below reported profit
$1.062M modeled Year 3 EBITDA
$1.842M modeled Year 5 EBITDA
How many kids do you need to make money in daycare?
The answer isn’t one fixed number. In this Daycare Center model, Year 1 breaks even in Month 2 at 45 licensed places and 60% occupancy, or about 27 occupied places. By Year 5, the center reaches 62 places and 90% occupancy, or about 56 occupied places; a $75k working-owner director salary changes the math versus profit after hiring a director.
Year 1 breakeven
45 licensed places
60% occupancy target
About 27 children enrolled
Breakeven lands in Month 2
Year 5 scale
62 licensed places
90% occupancy target
About 56 children enrolled
$75k owner salary changes profit math
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Want to see the main daycare income drivers?
1
Enrollment
60%-90%
Filling 45 to 62 places drives tuition faster than anything else, and even a small occupancy dip cuts owner cash hard.
2
Tuition Mix
$1.4K-$2.2K
Infant seats price higher than preschool seats, so the child mix can lift monthly revenue without adding more slots.
3
Staffing
$435K
Payroll is the biggest controllable cost, and the 10 FTE base can protect or erase EBITDA depending on ratio control.
4
Facility Cost
$15.2K/mo
The monthly lease and overhead stack sets the break-even line, so lower cost per licensed slot improves take-home.
5
Owner Role
$75K
The director salary is a real cash load, so owner-led management can change how much profit stays in the business.
6
Collections
On time
Fast parent billing and subsidy receipts keep payroll funded and stop cash from getting stuck in receivables.
Daycare Center Core Six Income Drivers
Enrollment And Capacity Utilization
Enrollment and Capacity
Filled licensed slots are what turn rent and admin into income. At 45 places and 60% occupancy, the model holds about 27 occupied places in Year 1; at 62 places and 90% occupancy, it reaches about 56 occupied places in Year 5. That gap raises tuition revenue and owner pay, but only if staffing, room ratios, and collections stay tight.
What this hides: infant rooms can cap growth before the building is full, preschool rooms can run out first, and seasonal drops can pull occupancy down fast. Waitlists, part-time schedules, and room-by-room limits matter more than total capacity alone. One empty room can leave fixed costs spread over fewer children.
Track Filled Slots Weekly
Measure occupancy by room, not just by the center. Track licensed slots, filled slots, waitlist count, part-time share, and monthly collection rate. The key formula is simple: filled slots ÷ licensed slots. If occupancy rises but payroll or unpaid tuition rises faster, owner pay can still fall.
Watch infant room fill rate.
Track preschool room capacity first.
Test part-time schedule gaps.
Plan for seasonal enrollment dips.
Hold staffing to room demand.
1
Tuition Rate And Program Mix
Tuition And Program Mix
This driver is the average revenue per occupied slot. It comes from age mix, full-time vs part-time schedules, sibling discounts, and after-school care. Year 1 tuition inputs are $1,800 infant, $1,600 toddler, and $1,400 preschool; Year 5 rises to $2,188, $1,945, and $1,702. More infant slots lift revenue, but they also need tighter staff coverage, so margin can fall if payroll rises faster than tuition.
Take-home income moves with the mix, not just headcount. A room filled with infants usually produces more cash per child than preschool, but sibling discounts and part-time gaps can pull the realized rate down. Here’s the quick math: higher tuition helps only when staffing, attendance, and collections stay aligned. If the center sells discounted or short-day slots, owner pay depends on the net rate after those cuts.
Track Net Tuition By Room
Measure gross tuition, discounts, and actual collected revenue by age group each month. The key input is not list price alone; it is the mix of infant, toddler, preschool, and after-school slots after part-time gaps. If infant rooms run full, watch labor closely because the extra revenue can be eaten by coverage needs.
Test pricing by schedule type, not just by age. Track revenue per occupied slot, staff hours per room, and the share of children on full-time plans. If part-time or sibling discounts rise, the average revenue per child drops, and the owner’s draw usually drops with it unless occupancy and labor stay tight.
2
Staffing Ratios And Payroll Control
Staffing Ratios and Payroll Control
Licensing ratios set the payroll floor, so the owner’s pay depends on how tightly hours are scheduled. In Year 1, payroll includes one director, three lead teachers, four assistant teachers, plus admin and kitchen staff. If room mix and attendance stay clean, payroll stays closer to plan and more tuition can flow to profit and owner draw.
By Year 5, staffing rises to five lead teachers and seven assistant teachers if onboarding or substitute coverage is weak. That makes overtime a real risk. Overtime can eat the owner’s distribution, because every extra coverage hour pushes labor cost up before cash reaches the owner.
Track Coverage Before Overtime
Measure staffing against enrolled children, room mix, absences, and substitute use. The key inputs are licensed ratios, schedule fit, overtime hours, substitute hours, and director coverage. If one room runs short, fix the schedule fast instead of spreading overtime across the week.
Use a weekly labor plan and compare actual hours to budget. If onboarding is slow or substitutes are unreliable, payroll drifts up and owner income drops. One clean rule helps: staff to ratio, not to habit. That keeps labor controlled while tuition stays in the business.
3
Facility Cost Per Licensed Slot
Facility Cost Per Licensed Slot
Facility cost per licensed slot is the rent-and-building load spread across each licensed place. With $152k in monthly fixed facility costs, this daycare must cover about $3,378 per slot at 45 places or about $2,452 per slot at 62 places before child-level profit starts. Lower slot cost raises break-even speed and leaves more room for owner pay.
The lease alone falls from about $222 per month per place at 45 slots to about $161 at 62 slots. That only works if classroom layout, playground space, inspections, and maintenance let you add capacity without pushing up utilities, cleaning, or repair costs faster than tuition grows.
Track Slot Cost Before You Add Rooms
Measure fixed facility cost per licensed place every month: fixed facility cost ÷ licensed slots. Use the full load, not just rent, so you see the real break-even point before the first child arrives. One vacant room can make a low-rent site expensive if it blocks licensed capacity.
Before expanding, test whether the building can support more places without new inspection, cleaning, or maintenance spikes. If the added slot count lowers cost per place faster than payroll rises, owner draw improves; if not, higher occupancy just hides a weak facility setup.
Track monthly fixed cost per slot.
Model 45 versus 62 places.
Check inspection and space limits.
4
Owner Role And Management Structure
Owner Role and Director Pay
If the owner works as the director, the daycare can show higher personal pay because the owner replaces a paid role. This model budgets a $75k director salary, so that amount is part of owner take-home when the owner is active in the role.
If the owner is passive, the center still pays a director, so owner income comes only from post-expense distributions. The key test is simple: compare reported profit with the $75k replacement salary, or you can overstate passive income.
Compare Profit to Replacement Salary
Track director hours, payroll, and profit after all expenses. If the owner runs the center, record the $75k as owner compensation, not pure profit. If the owner steps back, keep that salary in the model or distributions will look too high.
Measure owner time in the director role.
Track actual director pay and bonuses.
Compare profit to the $75k replacement cost.
Separate salary from owner draws.
One clean rule: if the center needs a director, someone gets paid $75k one way or another.
5
Collections And Cash Flow Reserves
Cash Collections and Reserve Needs
Accrual profit is not the same as cash you can pay yourself. In daycare, parent payments, deposits, late fees, refunds, and subsidy timing all change when cash arrives. The model shows a $861k minimum cash need in Month 2, so early distributions can strain the business fast.
This matters because payroll and rent are due before tuition clears. Registration fees also drop from $15k in Year 1 to $3k in Year 5, so launch cash is front-loaded. If collections slow or refunds rise, owner pay should wait until the reserve stays intact.
Hold Cash Before Owner Draws
Track cash conversion timing first: billed tuition, actual receipts, subsidy lag, and refund volume. Here’s the quick math: if cash comes in after payroll and rent, the owner’s draw is not safe yet. One missed collection cycle can hit liquidity hard.
Monitor weekly collections by source.
Separate deposits from spendable cash.
Delay distributions until reserves hold.
Flag subsidy delays and refund spikes.
6
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Compare lean, base, and strong daycare owner income scenarios
Owner income scenarios
Owner income here moves with fill rate, seat mix, and staffing load. Higher occupancy lifts EBITDA fast, but fixed lease and teacher payroll still cap what the owner can safely take home.
Low, base, and high cases show how occupancy changes owner take-home.
Scenario
Low CaseLean case
Base CaseBase case
High CaseUpside case
Launch model
This lower path assumes Year 1 scale with 45 places and 60% occupancy.
This middle path assumes the center reaches Month 2 breakeven and builds into Year 3 scale.
This stronger path assumes Year 5 scale with 62 places and 90% occupancy.
Typical setup
About 27 places are occupied, tuition starts near the Year 1 model, about $840k modeled tuition billings is the target, and the $75,000 director salary plus fixed costs keep take-home tight.
By Year 3, the model reaches 57 places and 78% occupancy, with about 44 occupied places and stronger EBITDA from fuller classrooms.
At about 56 occupied places, the model runs fuller rooms, stronger tuition billings, and the highest EBITDA while keeping the director on staff.
Cost drivers
45 places at 60% occupancy
$75,000 director salary
lease and utility load
food and materials
marketing and enrollment spend
57 places at 78% occupancy
about 44 occupied places
stronger tuition billings
fixed lease and staffing
lower marketing rate
62 places at 90% occupancy
about 56 occupied places
fuller infant and preschool rooms
stronger tuition billings
lower marketing rate
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves
$137,000Year 1 lean
$1,062,000Breakeven base
$1,842,000Full rooms
Best fit
Use this to stress-test a new opening that fills slower than planned.
Use this as the main planning case for budget, hiring, and debt sizing.
Use this to test how much owner cash the center can support when rooms stay near full.
!
Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or actual owner distributions. They are before taxes, debt, reserves, and cash timing changes.
A working owner may earn the budgeted director salary plus possible profit distributions In this model, the director salary is $75,000, and EBITDA is $137k in Year 1 That does not mean $212k is automatically spendable, because reserves, debt, taxes, and reinvestment can reduce cash taken home
This model shows breakeven in Month 2, with payback in 15 months That result depends on 45 licensed places, 60% Year 1 occupancy, and the assumed tuition and cost structure If enrollment ramps slower or licensing delays opening classrooms, breakeven can move out quickly
You don’t have to, but your owner income changes if you don’t The model includes a $75,000 director salary If you work as director, that can be owner pay If you hire someone else, that salary stays as an expense and your take-home depends more on distributions
Enrollment, payroll, rent, and collections usually matter most This model starts at 60% occupancy, reaches 90% by Year 5, and carries $152k in monthly fixed costs Cash also depends on parent payment timing, subsidy delays, refunds, deposits, and how much reserve you keep before taking distributions
Start with the role you’ll actually fill, then test profit after replacing yourself Use the $75,000 director salary as a working-owner baseline, then compare EBITDA from $137k in Year 1 to $1842M in Year 5 Keep taxes, debt, reserves, and startup cash separate from owner pay
About the author
Max Cooper
Founder Support Writer
Max Cooper is a founder support writer at Financial Models Lab, helping local business owners understand how small businesses make a profit. He focuses on practical planning before money is invested, with clear guidance on startup cost estimates and basic business planning. His work helps readers move from an idea to a simple, workable plan with confidence.
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