Nursery vs Childminder UK Which Is Right for Your Family?
A clear, honest comparison of nurseries and childminders in the UK — covering cost, regulation, flexibility, what happens when your child is ill, how funded hours work with each, and the decision framework that actually helps you choose.
① What Each Option Actually Is
② Cost Comparison
Cost is the most significant practical difference for most families — and the comparison is more nuanced than it first appears, because it depends heavily on your child’s age, your hours, and your region.
Under 2s
Nurseries charge significantly more for babies and toddlers under 2 because the legal staff-to-child ratio is 1:3 for this age group (versus 1:4 for 2-year-olds and 1:13 for 3–5 year olds in some settings). Full-time nursery for a baby in England costs approximately £1,200–£1,800 per month outside London, and £1,800–£2,500 in London. A childminder for the same hours is typically 20–35% cheaper because the home-based setup has lower overheads.
3 and 4-year-olds
Once free childcare hours kick in for 3 and 4-year-olds, the cost calculation changes substantially — both nurseries and childminders can claim the funded hours, so the primary cost comparison narrows to the hours above your entitlement and any additional charges. At this stage the cost difference between nurseries and childminders often narrows significantly.
③ Regulation and Inspection
Both nurseries and childminders are regulated by Ofsted in England (Care Inspectorate in Scotland, Estyn/CIW in Wales) and must meet the same Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) requirements. Both can be rated Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement or Inadequate. Neither type of setting is inherently better regulated than the other — what matters is the individual Ofsted report of the specific nursery or childminder you are considering.
You can check any nursery or childminder’s Ofsted report at reports.ofsted.gov.uk. It is worth reading the full report rather than just the overall grade, as the narrative reveals the specific strengths and areas for improvement that the grade alone does not.
④ Flexibility and Contingency Planning
Flexibility and contingency are where the practical differences between nurseries and childminders are most acutely felt — and where most parents report being caught out.
When your child is ill
Neither a nursery nor a childminder will accept a sick child — both require children to be symptom-free (typically 48 hours after a sickness or diarrhoea episode) before returning. This is the childcare gap that catches most working parents off guard. You will need a backup plan: a partner who can work from home, grandparents on standby, or a nanny emergency service. This is not something either nursery or childminder can solve.
When your provider is unavailable
A nursery has staff coverage — if your child’s key worker is ill, another qualified member of staff covers. This is the nursery’s most significant practical advantage. A childminder is a single person: if they are ill, injured or on holiday, your childcare disappears entirely. Good childminders have backup networks of other registered childminders they can refer children to — ask about this at the interview stage.
Holidays
Most nurseries are open 51 weeks per year, closing only over Christmas. Childminders set their own holiday entitlement — typically 4–6 weeks per year — but this may or may not align with your own holiday allowance. Check the contract: you may pay a retainer during the childminder’s holidays to secure the place.
⑤ Full Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Nursery | Childminder |
|---|---|---|
| Cost (under 2s) | Higher — ratio-driven | Lower — typically 20–35% lessCM wins |
| Cost (3–4 year olds, with funded hrs) | Broadly comparable after funded hours | Broadly comparable after funded hours |
| Staff ratios | Legally regulated by age group | Up to 6 children, often fewer in practiceCM wins |
| Continuity if provider ill | Covered by other staffNursery wins | No cover unless network arranged |
| Opening hours | Fixed — typically 7am–6pm | Often more flexible — negotiableCM wins |
| Holiday availability | 51 weeks/year typicallyNursery wins | 4–6 weeks closure per year |
| Home environment | Purpose-built setting | Domestic home environmentCM wins (for some) |
| Socialisation | More children, peer interactionNursery wins | Smaller group — quieter setting |
| EYFS curriculum | Formal structured delivery | Also required — individual approach |
| Accepts funded hours | Most do (check individual setting) | Many do (check individual CM) |
| Accepts Tax-Free Childcare | Yes | Yes (if Ofsted-registered) |
| Inspection | Ofsted — checked at reports.ofsted.gov.uk | Ofsted — same inspection framework |
⑥ Decision Framework — Which Suits You?
Neither is universally better. The right choice depends on your child’s age, your working hours, your budget, and the quality of the specific options available to you locally.
The nursery vs childminder debate generates a lot of parental conviction on both sides — but the evidence does not support either as categorically better for child development. What matters is the quality of the individual setting, the warmth of the key relationship your child has with their carer, and whether the practical arrangement works reliably for your family.
Our practical advice: shortlist two or three options of each type in your area, check their Ofsted reports, visit them in person, and ask specifically about backup cover for illness and holiday. The answers to those two questions — more than any other — predict how stressful the arrangement will be when things inevitably go wrong.

