Childcare Cost Vs Second Income Calculator
Calculate if a second income covers childcare costs in the UK. Factor in tax, National Insurance, nursery fees, and government support to see your true net financial benefit.
Income & Childcare Details
Enter your expected second income and childcare costs to calculate your net financial position
The total gross salary you expect to earn from returning to work or a second job.
Select the bracket that applies to your additional income. Pension contributions are not included here.
UK average is £7-£8 for nursery, £6-£7 for childminders. London is significantly higher.
Total hours per week you need childcare for (e.g., 40 for full-time, 25 for part-time).
Enter 52 for full-time year-round care, or 38 if only during school term-time.
Used to calculate maximum government support limits per child.
Gov adds £2 for every £8 you pay, up to £2,000 per child per year. Cannot be claimed with Universal Credit.
Applies to 38 weeks of the year. Note: Providers may still charge for meals and consumables.
Net Financial Benefit Results
Is your second income worth it after childcare costs and tax?
Enter your income and childcare details above, then click Calculate Net Benefit to see if working covers your childcare costs.
UK Childcare Costs & Support Benchmarks
Use these average UK figures to benchmark your expected childcare expenses and understand the government support available to working parents.
| UK Childcare Metric | Average Cost / Limit | Context / Details |
|---|---|---|
| Full-Time Nursery (Child under 2) | £250 – £350 / week | Varies heavily by region. London averages £400+ per week. |
| Full-Time Nursery (Child 2+) | £220 – £300 / week | Slightly cheaper than infant care. Childminders are often £50 less. |
| Tax-Free Childcare Max | £2,000 / child / year | Gov adds 20% to your payments. Up to £4,000 for disabled children. |
| 30 Hours Free Childcare | 30 hrs / week (38 weeks) | For working parents of 3-4 year olds. Covers education, not always meals. |
| Universal Credit Childcare | Up to 85% of costs | Max £1,015/mo for 1 child, £1,739/mo for 2+ children. Replaces Tax-Free. |
| Childminder Average Cost | £6.00 – £7.50 / hour | Often more flexible than nurseries and slightly cheaper for full-time. |
Childcare & Second Income FAQ
Everything UK parents need to know about childcare costs, government support, and the financial reality of returning to work.
Full-time nursery (50 hours a week) in the UK costs on average £1,200 to £1,600 per month depending on the region. London and the South East are significantly more expensive, often exceeding £1,800 per month, while Northern England and Wales may be closer to £1,000.
Tax-Free Childcare is a UK government scheme where for every £8 you pay into a childcare account, the government adds £2. You can get up to £2,000 per child per year (or £4,000 for disabled children). Both parents must be working and earn under £100,000 each to be eligible.
Working parents of 3 and 4-year-olds in England can get 30 hours of free childcare per week for 38 weeks of the year (or stretched over more weeks). This covers school hours and can significantly reduce term-time or full-time nursery bills, though you may still pay for consumables or meals.
It depends on your net income versus net childcare costs. For many, the first year back to work might feel like a financial wash due to the high upfront costs of nursery. However, long-term career progression, pension contributions, and government support schemes like Tax-Free Childcare often make working financially beneficial over time.
Yes, if you are on Universal Credit, you can claim back up to 85% of your childcare costs, up to a maximum of £1,015 for one child or £1,739 for two or more children per month. This is significantly more generous than Tax-Free Childcare, and you cannot claim both simultaneously.
