logo
How much are you paying for your child's summer childcare?

How much are you paying for your child's summer childcare?

STV News17-07-2025
Scotland has seen a 3% rise in summer childcare costs on last year, report finds
The average weekly price of holiday childcare clubs in Scotland is £167.87
The average weekly price of holiday childminders in Scotland is £238.05
Scottish council's do not have a general childcare sufficiency duty for school-age holiday childcare
Only 17% of the childcare provided across Scotland is provided by the public sector
Families who need childcare over the six-week summer holiday face paying over £1,000 per child on average, a report has found.
Scotland has seen a 3% rise in the cost on last year and there are significant gaps in provision for children with additional needs, parents working atypical hours and families in rural areas, according to research by the Coram Family and Childcare charity.
Councils have also reported a shortage of holiday childcare places.
The report suggests families in the UK pay on average £1,076 for six weeks at a holiday childcare club for a school-age child, which is £677 more than they would pay for six weeks in an after-school club during term time.
The research, based on surveys of local authorities in Scotland, England and Wales between April and June, suggests the average cost of a holiday childcare club has risen by 4% in a year to £179 per week.
Wales has the highest weekly price at £210, followed by England at £178 and Scotland at £168.
Holiday clubs in Scotland are just under two-and-a-half-times more expensive than term-time after-school provision, with six weeks of summer childcare costing £569.43 more.
The report also found that the average cost of a childminder during the holidays is £234 per week in the UK.
No local authorities in Scotland said they had enough holiday childcare for parents who work atypical hours or children who live in rural areas.
But Scotland has a high percentage of providers open over the summer holiday: 92% of childcare clubs and 96% of childminders are open during the summer holiday.
Only 9% of childcare clubs and 22% of childminders are open during the Christmas holiday, the lowest level in Great Britain.
The average cost of public care in Scotland is 24% cheaper than that provided by the PVI sector, with families paying £139.76 for public childcare and £173.93 for PVI.
However, only 17% of the childcare provided across Scotland is provided by the public sector.
The Scottish Government has committed to creating a system to provide year-round childcare for those of school age by 2026.
The needs of low-income families are being prioritised, and ensuring that those on the lowest incomes can access the childcare they need for free.
Scottish councils do not have a general sufficiency duty for school-age holiday childcare.
This has resulted in most local authorities in Scotland not having data to contribute to the report. It means that the true levels of sufficiency across the country may be higher than the figures suggest.
It was found that just over a fifth of councils who responded said they had enough provision for at least 75% of four- to seven-year-olds.
But provision for other age groups was lower.
The next highest levels of holiday childcare sufficiency were for eight- to 11-year-olds and children whose parents work full time, with 17% and 13% of local authorities who responded reporting enough provision for at least 75% of children in these categories. Adobe Stock Only 17% of the childcare provided across Scotland is provided by the public sector.
Coram Family and Childcare is calling on the Scottish Government to do more for holiday childcare providers to meet the needs children.
Lydia Hodges, head of Coram Family and Childcare, said: 'The need for childcare doesn't finish at the end of term.
'Holiday childcare not only helps parents to work but gives children the chance to have fun, make friends and stay active during the school breaks.
'Yet all too often it is missing from childcare conversations.'
The Scottish Government has been contacted for comment.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cabinet Secretary backs Glasgow hub's child poverty support
Cabinet Secretary backs Glasgow hub's child poverty support

Glasgow Times

time29 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Cabinet Secretary backs Glasgow hub's child poverty support

Shirley-Anne Somerville MSP visited the Wise Group's Glasgow hub to meet mentors, customers and partners delivering the Scottish Government-backed Relational Mentoring Scotland (RMS) service. This visit follows her £2.2 million investment in the Whole Family Relational Mentoring service designed to help eradicate child poverty. The scheme provides intensive, personalised support to families facing multiple challenges including housing, mental health and unemployment. It aims to integrate with public services to deliver better, joined-up outcomes. During her visit, Somerville awarded the Relational Mentoring Changemaker Award, acknowledging dedication to helping families achieve sustainable change. She said: 'It was good to meet mentors and those supported through the programme, which is providing life-changing support in areas such as employability and skills, improving household finances, and mental health and wellbeing. 'Eradicating child poverty is the Scottish Government's top priority and we are committed to doing all we can to support families with the cost of living including offering free school meals to more than 270,000 pupils, free bus travel for 2.3 million people and early learning and childcare worth more than £6000 per eligible child every year – demonstrating our determination to invest in our communities when they need it most.' Read more: New programme launched to help people in Glasgow get back into work Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice and Wise Group mentors (Image: Supplied) Read more: 'Wonderful' housing and care campus praised as Cabinet Secretary visits site The Wise Group's data shows that 98% of people supported have needs across at least three areas. Progress in one area, like housing, often leads to improvements in others, such as health or employability. The Whole Family model is now informing wider conversations around public service reform and child poverty prevention. Sean Duffy, chief executive of the Wise Group, said: 'The Cabinet Secretary's investment in this service is making a real and measurable difference. 'Our mentors walk alongside families – not just signposting, but staying the course. 'The integration we've seen with local authorities, health and employment services is key to the outcomes we're achieving. 'Today's visit affirms what we know to be true: that ending poverty means transforming how support is delivered, not just what is delivered. 'We are proud to be part of that mission.'

Work begins on new council home development in Millerston
Work begins on new council home development in Millerston

Glasgow Times

time3 hours ago

  • Glasgow Times

Work begins on new council home development in Millerston

Work has begun on the site at Coshneuk Road in Millerton, as part of North Lanarkshire Council's wider plan to deliver 6000 homes by 2035. The properties will include a mix of one and two-bedroom flats, as well as two, three, and four-bedroom houses and a bungalow designed for disabled access. Councillor Michael McPake, housing convener, said: "It's always pleasing to mark the beginning of another new council housing project which will deliver more new homes for our tenants, particularly in an area of high demand. "We're making significant progress in delivering our new supply programme, providing jobs, boosting the local economy, and building homes for our tenants now and for generations to come. "It's all part of our ambition to make North Lanarkshire the place to live, and I look forward to watching the new homes progress." Read more: Plans to build five-bedroom villas revealed - what we know (Image: North Lanarkshire Council) The £4.2 million development is being delivered in partnership with The JR Group and will receive grant funding from the Scottish Government's Affordable Housing Supply Programme. Expected to be completed by spring 2026, the development will feature ground source heat pumps to reduce heating emissions, along with triple-glazed windows, high levels of insulation, and solar panels. The homes are designed to meet Housing for Varying Needs standards, allowing them to adapt to residents' changing requirements, and are built to Secure by Design principles to improve safety and security. Read more: 'Urgent' road closure put in place in busy area - here's where Gary McGregor, managing director of The JR Group, said: "As a business, we are committed to playing our part in delivering much-needed, energy-efficient new homes to communities across Scotland, so it is fantastic to be working alongside North Lanarkshire Council to deliver our first project for them. "Coshneuk Road is a well-considered development and sits in a fantastic, well-established community, close to local amenities. "As a brownfield site, it is great to see it brought back to life and given a new purpose. "The homes we are building here are modern, spacious, and energy efficient, and we look forward to progressing works in the coming months."

Building memories brick by brick at the home of LEGO in Denmark
Building memories brick by brick at the home of LEGO in Denmark

The National

time6 hours ago

  • The National

Building memories brick by brick at the home of LEGO in Denmark

To be fair, I was a massive fan of LEGO when I was wee, back when it was just simple bricks you bashed together to make unrecognisable approximations of things I loved, like planes and boats. As I grew up and LEGO morphed into a confusing array of theme parks and special ranges – from LEGO Friends and the Asian-themed Ninjago – I lost sight of LEGO as my two daughters grew into it. It was not something at 53 I thought I would take any pleasure re-visiting. READ MORE: Scottish transport company acquires historic English bus firm I thought my honesty with Kathrine would fall on deaf ears. Far from it. 'We too realised we had to simplify things and get back to the core of what this family-run business does,' she beams as she brews me a proper coffee in LEGO House's café – it's always a great sign when a managing director chips in. 'We got back to basics, selling off the theme parks and focusing back on the brick. Again, it's all about the brick.' It is all about the brick in Billund – the self-styled 'Capital of Children' – as we find out when we fly into the airport and see the immediate image of LEGO. Billund is still home to LEGO's headquarters and lives and breathes LEGO, nowhere more so than LEGO House (below), which has been a roaring success since opening in 2017. LEGO House is the single biggest investment by LEGO in years and took a year and a half to build, with 20 million LEGO bricks woven into the structure. I love that the vast reception is free for anyone to enter and play in. And that numbers are strictly limited beyond the ticket barriers to the upper floors so that families can really enjoy themselves without feeling rushed or overcrowded. The focus is indeed back on the brick, with building using LEGO paramount over fancy themed kits. For a family attraction to work, it has to engage everyone; LEGO House does. My daughters delight in building wee boats and buses, taking photos that are recorded on their bracelets, negating the 'need' for my teenagers to walk around with their phones. Indeed, they soon ask us to store their phones while they throw themselves into the action, peeling back the years. Priceless. We bond over family portraits made of LEGO, but they also skip off happily on their own with none of the bickering that can accompany visits to family attractions. And my wife and I don't just slump in a café either, making what is, of course, deemed an 'embarrassing' LEGO movie about how we met and married. As we move from yellow zone to red, to green and to blue, my cynicism slowly dissolves. My own journey is complete in the basement museum, which catapults me back to my childhood. Not ones to stand on their hard-won plastic laurels, Kathrine shows me into the 'Masters Academy'. 'LEGO House already has 20 million LEGO bricks and soon it will have another five million more,' she explains. It doesn't open until September, but the limited slots are getting snapped up fast at this new year-round attraction. It looks like a TV show and will have two actors leading just 40 guests through the weird and wonderful world of becoming a 'LEGO Master'. Often restaurants at theme parks are just refuelling stops bathed in grease. Not so at LEGO House with Mini Chef. Kathrine insists they 'serve proper food'. She is right, just that it is served by robots. The delightful Robert and Roberta dispense our lunchboxes. We choose our meals – mine is falafel followed by a delicious cauliflower curry – on the screen at our table then insert our orders – built, of course, in LEGO. Kathrine insists there will only ever be one LEGO House, but there are 11 LEGOLAND theme parks globally. The original, of course, is in Billund. LEGOLAND may no longer be owned by LEGO, but the second-biggest tourist attraction in Denmark outside Copenhagen swirls around the brick. We spend a whole day at LEGOLAND. Again, it proves, for me, surprisingly enjoyable. The Billund incarnation is much more laidback than the frenetic Windsor one. My teens enjoy bashing around rides that may not have the adrenaline wows of Florida's parks, but are fun for us all to share together. If you're visiting the LEGO House, a visit to the adjacent theme park remains essential. For busier times, they have an efficient fast-track system too – 'Reserve and Ride'. Heading home, I'd expected the kids would be sated with LEGO. Instead Tara is gleaming with the LEGO kit she bought by the designer who was casually signing boxes in the LEGO House, and Emma insists the first thing she is going to do when she gets home is get out her LEGO. I may well be joining her. For more information on LEGO House, see Make sure to book ahead for the house, the Mini Chef experience and the LEGO Masters Academy

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store