
American families with two children must earn over $400,000 yearly just to afford child care at federal benchmarks, exposing the devastating legacy of fiscal mismanagement and government overreach under past administrations.
Story Highlights
- LendingTree study shows families need $402,708 annual income for infant and 4-year-old care to stay under 7% of income threshold.
- Average two-child household earns $145,656, creating a 176.5% affordability gap nationwide.
- High costs contribute to declining U.S. birth rates, threatening family values and future workforce.
- 20 states require triple average income; Hawaii tops list at 269.7% gap.
- Even high-income families struggle, as confirmed by LendingTree analyst Matt Schulz.
LendingTree Study Exposes Child Care Crisis
LendingTree released its February 2026 study analyzing child care costs for an infant and 4-year-old across all U.S. states. The research uses the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services benchmark of 7% of household income for affordability. National average annual costs hit $28,190, sourced from Child Care Aware of America data. This forces families to earn $402,708 yearly to comply, far exceeding the $145,656 average income for two-child households. The 176.5% gap underscores years of inflation and regulatory burdens crushing working parents. President Trump’s pro-family policies now offer hope for relief through deregulation and tax cuts.
State Disparities Burden Families Unequally
Hawaii faces the worst crisis with a 269.7% income gap, followed by Nebraska at 263.0% and Montana at 257.8%. In 20 states, families need at least triple their average income for affordable care. South Dakota proves most manageable at 95.4% gap. Care.com’s 2026 report details weekly rates: nannies at $870, daycare at $332, family centers at $323, and babysitters at $175. These variations highlight how overregulation drives up costs, punishing traditional families striving to stay together amid economic pressures from prior leftist spending sprees.
Declining Birth Rates Signal Family Strain
The study links skyrocketing child care expenses to falling U.S. birth rates, a trend eroding conservative family values and national strength. Families delay or forgo children due to financial impossibility, reshaping demographics and shrinking future workforce. Black and American Indian households suffer disproportionate gaps, amplifying inequality from stagnant wages under Biden-era policies. Working parents, especially mothers, cut hours or quit jobs, diverting resources from savings or homeownership. This crisis demands limited-government solutions like expanded tax credits over bloated federal programs.
Matt Schulz, LendingTree’s chief consumer finance analyst, declared childcare costs astronomical, burdening even high-income families. He urges maximizing employer benefits, nanny shares, work schedule adjustments, and provider negotiations for discounts. Providers grapple with labor and facility expenses, yet families bear the brunt in a system rigged against self-reliance.
Path Forward Under Trump Administration
President Trump’s 2026 agenda prioritizes American families by slashing regulations that inflate child care costs and promoting economic growth to boost real wages. Past overspending fueled inflation, but current reforms promise relief without expanding welfare dependency. Families must adapt short-term through flexible arrangements while policymakers target root causes: excessive government interference and failure to support traditional structures. This study validates conservative calls for fiscal sanity, individual liberty, and policies strengthening marriages and births essential to America’s future.
Sources:
LendingTree Child Care Affordability Study
Washington Times: LendingTree Study on Two-Child Households
AOL: Two-Child Household Must Earn for Child Care
Fortune: Two-Child Household Income for Childcare Crisis
Care.com 2026 Cost of Care Report



