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How to Use the Money When You No Longer Pay for Daycare

May 11, 2023 | Leave a Comment

Picture of daycare toys on a shelf

When you have a newborn baby, the expenses come fast and furious. Diapers are expensive, as is formula (if you need to buy it). However, those expenses are small compared to daycare costs. Depending on where you live, daycare can cost $1,000 or more monthly. Many parents count down until their child enters school, and they can reclaim the money spent on daycare. But not so fast. What if you reallocate the money when you no longer pay for daycare for future expenses your child will incur? (Trust me, costs keep climbing as your child moves into the tween and teen years.)

Why Should You Reallocate the Money?

Since you’re already spending a set amount for daycare, you’re used to paying that cost. So why not keep putting aside the money when you no longer have to pay for daycare? Future you will be thankful you did this.

How to Allocate the Money

Tweens and teens are lovely, but they’re also expensive! Here are some of the upcoming expenses that you may want to save for by using the money you used for daycare:

Braces

Picture of a girl smiling with braces on her teeth.

I have three kids, and two of the three needed braces. Thankfully, we had good dental insurance that covered approximately half of each child’s cost. However, even with the insurance, we still had to pay $6000 out of pocket, roughly $3000 for each kid. We started a braces fund when our first child was nine, but even then, we had to finance and pay monthly. Imagine if we had invested the money we paid for daycare. We could have covered the cost of braces from this fund since daycare for our oldest cost $800 a month (and that was over a decade ago).

Future Activities

Kids’ activities can be expensive, especially if they join traveling sports teams. My daughter takes one dance class a week, but some girls in her class are part of the company and take five to eight dance classes per week. The cost of the classes, dance shoes, and performance costumes adds up quickly. If you have more than one child with this type of dedication, the cost of classes can come close to the cost of daycare expenses.

College Fund

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, consider setting aside the money you no longer pay for daycare for a college fund. Putting money into a college fund as soon as your child is born is the wisest decision because of the power of compounding interest. However, when your child is five and attending school, if you funnel all of the daycare money into a college account, you’ll be in a strong position to pay college expenses.

Final Thoughts

Considering how you will reclaim the money for daycare once your child is in school is attractive. However, for your financial future, the more intelligent decision might be to use the money to save for other expenses your child will have, especially college expenses.

Read More

A Financial Guide to Childcare

5 Ways You Can Save Money on Braces for Your Kids

How Much Do Braces Cost and How Can You Save Money?

Melissa Batai
Melissa Batai

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in Arizona where she dislikes the summer heat but loves the natural beauty of the area.

Filed Under: Education, Money and Finances, Parenting Blog at KidsAintCheap Tagged With: biggest childhood expenses, braces, college, daycare, extracurriculars

The Biggest Childhood Expenses You’re Likely to Face – Ages 0 to 5

January 2, 2017 | Leave a Comment

Children are a gift.They make us laugh, they make us cry and they make our lives worth living. On the flip side, children are also one of life’s greatest financial expenses. If you’re a new parent or will be soon, it may seem like you hear about a never ending list of things your child needs. Today I’m breaking down the biggest childhood expenses from age 0 to 5.

The Biggest Childhood Expenses You’re Likely to Face

Age 0 to 1: Diapers

Diapers are expensive. Not only is the price daunting ($20+ to $40+), the amount that a new parent goes through can be astounding. On average, a baby will go through over 2,000 diapers in his or her first year of life.

How to Save: To get a leg up on that expense, open a second checking or savings account just for baby expenses. Drop an allotted amount of cash in the account every month. You’ll soon have a steady cash flow for that expensive diaper fund.

Age 2 to 3: Day Care

I have known day cares to charge under $200 a week, to up to $1,000 a week depending on the region. For example, the $1,000 dollar a week

For example, the $1,000 per week day care in my area caters to the children of doctors, judges, lawyers and prominent corporations. However, no matter if you are a high-income earner or average Joe, day care can be brutal on a family’s budget.

The average cost of day care in the U.S. is $11,666 per year. However, the range can fluctuate depending on the area you are in between $3,582 to $18,773 a year.

How to Save: Sometimes you can offset the cost a little if you:

  • Consider working at a day care to receive an employee discount.
  • Find a center that offers a discount for siblings.
  • Price the cost of living and decide if it’s financially healthier for you to work less and stay home with your child.

Age 4 to 5: Preschool and Health Care

Depending on where you live and the quality of the school, the price for preschool could be very high. The average cost of sending your child to preschool is between $4,460-$13,158 per year.

Health care is another big expense, especially in the early years. Not only do little ones get sick more often because their immune systems are not built up, but other health care expenses can arise too. Things like special therapies (speech, occupational, etc) or disabilities may not be covered under some insurance plans. Special surgeries or uncommon injuries may not be covered, either.

This means parents have to pay outrageous amounts of out of pocket expenses for things not covered under their plan.

How to Save: Find out what your insurance plan does and doesn’t cover. Consider opening a Health Savings Account and stockpiling it for unknown health-related expenses. The great thing about an HSA is that its contributions are tax deductible.

In Conclusion

There are many things to think about when you have a new baby. Focus on the biggest childhood expenses and figure out how you are going to best navigate each one. This will help to ensure a financially sound first five years.

How do you save money for your family’s biggest childhood expenses? Share one or two ways with us below.

Filed Under: Medical, Money and Finances, Parenting Tagged With: biggest childhood expenses, cost of day care, cost of diapers, medical expenses, preschool

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Basic Principles Of Good Parenting

Here some basic principles for good parenting:

  1. What You Do Matters: Your kids are watching you. So, be purposeful about what you want to accomplish.
  2. You Can’t be Too Loving: Don’t replace love with material possessions, lowered expectations or leniency.
  3. Be Involved Your Kids Life: Arrange your priorities to focus on what your kid’s needs. Be there mentally and physically.
  4. Adapt Your Parenting: Children grow quickly, so keep pace with your child’s development.
  5. Establish and Set Rules: The rules you set for children will establish the rules they set for themselves later.  Avoid harsh discipline and be consistent.
  6. Explain Your Decisions: What is obvious to you may not be evident to your child. They don’t have the experience you do.
  7. Be Respectful To Your Child: How you treat your child is how they will treat others.  Be polite, respectful and make an effort to pay attention.
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