WA — WA 2026 Guide

How to Become a Child Care Worker in Washington

What child care workers in Washington actually earn (it is the lowest pay floor of any trade on this site), how the CDA and the state's licensing path work, and whether the math survives a household switch. No sugar-coating.

$37K avg salary |19+ programs |Updated March 23, 2026
KEY FACTS — WASHINGTON
+ Year-one pay in Washington runs $13-$16/hr — about $27-$33k a year — and that is the honest floor on the lowest-paid trade on Prentice. Verify your specific county on the BLS OEWS page for SOC 39-9011.
+ The national baseline credential is the CDA (Child Development Associate) through the Council for Professional Recognition. 120 hours of education, 480 hours of work experience, a portfolio, an exam, a verification visit. Roughly $425 in fees, sometimes covered by the state.
+ Washington licenses child care centers and family child care homes through the Washington Department of Children. Workers themselves sometimes need a state credential too — verify the worker-level rule on the Washington Department of Children page before you start.
+ Washington's QRIS is Early Achievers. The QRIS rating affects subsidy reimbursement, scholarship eligibility, and NAEYC-accreditation pathways. A higher rating usually means higher pay floors at that center.
+ Lead-teacher and director pay tops out around $24-$32/hr ($50-$67k) for experienced workers with a CDA plus an associate or bachelor's in Early Childhood Education. Center directors and owners can push higher; most workers do not.
+ Washington has roughly 19+ registered apprenticeship or credentialed pathways linking community-college Early Childhood Education coursework with paid work in licensed centers. Verify current cohorts with Child Care Aware of Washington (the statewide CCR&R).
+ Required certs you will see in nearly every job posting: infant/child/adult CPR and First Aid, state mandated-reporter training, often a state-specific health and safety course, and increasingly some Early Childhood Education credit hours.
+ Pay reality check: child care in the United States is funded by parent fees plus state subsidies, both of which are capped by what middle-class families can pay. That is why this trade pays what it pays. The work matters; the wages reflect a structural issue, not your value.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current hours, exams, fees, reciprocity, and local add-ons with the official state or local licensing authority before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

What you'll earn in Washington (the lowest pay floor of any trade on this site)

Pay in Washington, in actual numbers, looks like this:

  • Year-one assistant teacher / aide: $13-$16/hr — roughly $27-$33k annually at 40 hours, before any shift differential or stipend.
  • Lead teacher with a CDA: $17-$23/hr — about $35-$48k annually, often with health benefits at NAEYC-accredited centers and chains, rarely at small independents.
  • Director / specialist / center owner: $24-$32/hr — $50-$67k annually. Above that range you are usually either an owner-operator, a multi-site administrator, or in a state-funded pre-K classroom that pays on the public-school scale.

This is the lowest pay floor of any trade on Prentice. National median runs $14-$18/hr. Even master-level workers rarely clear $50k. Verify your county on the BLS OEWS page for SOC 39-9011.

Why so low? Child care in the U.S. is funded by parent fees plus state subsidies, and both are capped by what middle-class families can actually pay. The work matters. The wages reflect a structural funding problem, not your value. The brochure won't say that. The foreman will.

The CDA + state-license clock

The national credential most adults aim for is the CDA (Child Development Associate) through the Council for Professional Recognition. The clock:

  • 120 hours of formal early-childhood education across eight content areas — health, safety, growth, learning, family, program management, professionalism, observation.
  • 480 hours of work experience in a licensed center with children in your selected age group (infant, toddler, preschool, or family child care).
  • A professional portfolio, family questionnaires, and a verification visit by a CDA Professional Development Specialist.
  • A CDA exam. Roughly $425 in total fees, sometimes covered by the state's T.E.A.C.H. or scholarship program.

On top of the CDA, Washington runs its own licensing rules through the Washington Department of Children. The Washington Department of Children licenses the center and family child care home; some states also require a worker-level credential or registry entry.

You can't shortcut the work-experience hours. You can compress the front door — by being ready when a center is hiring, by having your CPR/First Aid and mandated-reporter training already in hand, by knowing the Early Achievers rating of the center where you apply — but the clock is the clock.

Is Washington a strong child-care market?

Tech in the Seattle metro (Amazon, Microsoft), aerospace in Everett, healthcare statewide, the federal civilian workforce — Washington has been one of the more active states on registered ECE apprenticeship and the licensed-care shortage in King County is well-documented.

Strong locally usually means three things at once: multiple licensed sponsors within commute, a Early Achievers rating ladder you can plan around, and a subsidy structure that lets the center raise wages as its rating climbs.

Seattle and Bellevue housing is expensive; eastern Washington (Spokane) remains more affordable. No state income tax. Pull up your monthly survival number — rent, food, transport, debt minimums, insurance, your own childcare if you have kids — and stack it against a worst-case month-1 take-home at $13/hr. Then decide.

The routes into the trade in Washington

  • Direct hire at a licensed center, CDA pursued part-time. This is how most child care workers start. You apply at a Early Achievers-rated center, get hired as an aide or assistant, and pursue the CDA on the side with the center's support. Pay starts at $13/hr; benefits are uneven.
  • Community-college Early Childhood Education program. Seattle Central College and Bellevue College — Early Childhood Education AAS, CDA-aligned. AAS programs run 60-65 credits and align with the CDA portfolio. Many states will pay tuition through T.E.A.C.H., a state ECE scholarship, or the federal Pell Grant.
  • Registered apprenticeship through the state. Washington DCYF and the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges run a registered ECE Apprenticeship through community colleges and licensed centers under the Early Achievers framework. SEIU 925 represents many family-child-care providers. You are paid while you train, the center sponsors the CDA, and you graduate with a national credential and credit toward the associate degree.
  • Work-up-from-aide route. Aide → assistant teacher → lead teacher → director. Most centers will move you up as you log hours and complete CDA modules. Document the hours; many state QRIS frameworks audit them directly. Child Care Aware of Washington (the statewide CCR&R) can map the ladder for your area.
  • Family child care home (your own, eventually). After 1-3 years in a center plus your CDA, some adults get licensed as a family child care home and run a small ratio (typically 4-6 children) out of their own home. This is a small business, not a job. The pay ceiling is higher; the hours are longer; the regulatory load is real.
  • Military spouse remote-state route. If you're a military spouse and your CDA is portable, the Council for Professional Recognition recognizes your credential across PCS moves. Each state adds its own licensing layer, but the CDA travels with you.

Licensing in Washington — the actual rule

Centers and family child care homes in Washington are licensed through the Washington Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF). The path most adults follow:

  1. Apply at a licensed center (or a family child care home that hires assistants).
  2. Complete the state's pre-service training requirements before working unsupervised with children — typically infant/child/adult CPR and First Aid, mandated-reporter training, and a state-specific health and safety course.
  3. Begin logging the 480 hours of work experience required for the CDA, while taking the 120 hours of education through Seattle Central College and Bellevue College — Early Childhood Education AAS, CDA-aligned or an approved provider.
  4. Submit the CDA portfolio, family questionnaires, and verification visit. Sit the CDA exam.
  5. Renew CDA every three years through continuing education. Track your hours through the state's professional registry tied to Early Achievers.

Working Connections Child Care reimburses subsidy; rates step up by Early Achievers level. Higher Early Achievers ratings usually pull higher reimbursement rates, which is the lever centers use to raise wages above the floor.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current pre-service training, fees, CDA-exam eligibility, and Early Achievers requirements with the Washington Department of Children and the Council for Professional Recognition before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

How to apply (the actual sequence)

  1. Pull the Child Care Aware of Washington (the statewide CCR&R) list of licensed centers within your commute radius. Early Achievers ratings are usually publicly posted; sort by rating, then by commute, then by hours.
  2. Complete the basics before you apply: infant/child/adult CPR and First Aid certification, the state's mandated-reporter course, and a TB test if your county requires it. Free or low-cost; most can be done in a weekend.
  3. Apply to multiple centers. NAEYC-accredited and high-Early Achievers centers tend to pay better and have more structured CDA support, but they hire less often. Mid-tier centers hire faster.
  4. Treat the interview like a real conversation. Bring your driver's license, social security card, high school diploma or GED, and any prior education or volunteer-with-kids documentation. Ask about CDA support, paid training time, ratios, and turnover.
  5. If the first center is the wrong fit, leave fast. Pay attention to staff turnover, ratios, and how the director handles a tough afternoon. The crew tells you everything. There is another sponsor down the road.

The lifestyle reality in Washington

Early starts. Some centers open at 6:00 a.m. for parents who commute. Late closes. Parent communication every day, often when the parent is stressed about a sick kid, a missed pickup, or a teething week.

Body wear is real. Lifting toddlers, sitting on the floor, squatting at child-height for hours. Knees and back will have a say in this by year three. Illness exposure is constant, especially in infant rooms. Burnout is the most common reason workers leave.

The pay-to-stress ratio is the worst part of this trade. The work is meaningful, the hours are real, and the wages do not match. That is the honest version. The trade also has real branches: lead teacher, infant or special-needs specialist, center director, family-child-care owner, public pre-K teacher (which pays on the public-school scale), or eventually administrator and ECE faculty. The ladder exists; it just rises slowly.

Switching at 35, 40, 45 with a household — be especially honest

Year-one pay in Washington at $13-$16/hr ($27-$33k) is below sustainable income for many adults running a household. That is the honest math.

Adults who survive the switch into child care usually have one of three things in place: a working partner covering the household's fixed costs, a paid-off mortgage or low-rent housing, or a state-funded pre-K placement that pays on the public-school scale instead of the private-center scale. Without one of those three, the math at $13-$16/hr is genuinely hard.

The five-year picture: complete the CDA, lead a classroom, log two to three years, then either move into a director track ($24-$32/hr), open a family child care home, or move to a public-school pre-K classroom. The ceiling above $32/hr in Washington usually requires either ownership or a public-payroll placement. That is the realistic five-year income picture.

If you love working with kids and your household can absorb the pay floor, this trade is honest, important, undervalued work. If the floor doesn't survive your monthly bills, that doesn't kill the trade for you — it might mean the public pre-K route or the family-child-care-owner route is the only version that math works for. Run the numbers before you apply, not after.

Your next move

Three concrete things to do this week:

  1. Pull up the Washington Department of Children list of licensed child care centers in your county. Note the ones with the highest Early Achievers ratings within commute.
  2. Sit down with your monthly bills and write your survival number. Stack it against $13-$16/hr at 40 hours. If the gap is closeable with a partner's income or a public-pre-K route, the trade is on the table. If not, switch to that conversation now, not after you've quit.
  3. Open a notebook. Day 30: CPR/First Aid + mandated-reporter complete. Day 60: applications submitted to three centers. Day 90: first day on the job, CDA enrollment in motion. Date them now.

If the numbers and the local picture make sense, the deeper playbook is in the Child Care Worker switch brief and the Child Care Worker Guide — interview prep, sponsor due-diligence questions, CDA portfolio guidance, and the licensing details state-by-state.

You don't have to be 22 with a teaching degree to do this work. You just have to be ready for the floor.

CHILD CARE WORKER PAY IN WASHINGTON
ENTRY
$13/hr
MEDIAN
$18/hr
EXPERIENCED
$24/hr

Estimated based on BLS data and Washington cost of living. Actual wages vary by employer, experience, and specialization.

WHERE THIS TRADE SITS IN THE WASHINGTON LABOR MARKET

Washington: ~803 of 4.3K (~3.7%) · market pressure 72/100 — High pressure.

Child Care Worker earning $100K+ annually in Washington
~803 of 4.3K (~3.7%)

Confidence: medium. Annual labor earnings (W-2 wages + self-employment), not OEWS hourly-wage extrapolations.

Source: Census ACS 2024 5-year PUMS.

OEWS six-figure baseline (child care worker)
Insufficient data

Confidence: high. Log-normal fit residual is within tolerance.

Source: BLS OEWS straight-time wages.

Market pressure score (child care worker, Washington)
72/100 — High pressure

Confidence: medium. Composite of projected annual openings, projected growth, and current $100K+ earnings rate. Not a direct vacancy count.

Source: Projections Central data; score computed by Prentice.

Bachelor’s+ in the Washington labor force
2.03M

Source: Census ACS 2022 5-year.

National comparison

Nationally: Insufficient data. 77.8M bachelor’s-holders in the U.S. labor force.

Sources: BLS OEWS; Census ACS PUMS; Projections Central; Census ACS 5-year subject. The OEWS baseline uses log-normal fits on OEWS wage percentiles; the $100K+ annual earners count uses ACS PUMS WAGP+SEMP labor earnings. See methodology.

Loading metro view

LOCAL MARKET SCORECARD (STATE)

36/100
INCOMPLETE SIGNALS — VERIFY LOCALLY

Heuristic score with 1/4 complete signal groups. Missing or thin: sponsor density, wage, demand.

Sponsor density 6/25

Sponsor density not available — verify locally

Wage strength 6/25

Wage data not available

Demand pressure 6/25

Demand data not yet published

Training accessibility 18/25

Clear licensing pathway

Heuristic summary of labor-market and program signals already published on this page. Confirm sponsor availability, licensing, and wages locally before making a paid training decision.

LICENSING & ELIGIBILITY

LICENSING IN WASHINGTON

Centers and family child care homes in Washington are licensed through the Washington Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF). Workers themselves pursue the CDA (Child Development Associate) through the Council for Professional Recognition. The clock is roughly 120 hours of early-childhood coursework plus 480 hours of work experience in a licensed center.

  1. Apply at a licensed center; complete the state's pre-service training requirements before working unsupervised — CPR/First Aid, mandated-reporter training, state health and safety.
  2. Log the 480 hours of work experience while completing the 120 hours of CDA education through a community college or approved provider.
  3. Submit the CDA portfolio, family questionnaires, verification visit. Sit the CDA exam.
  4. Renew CDA every three years through continuing education.
  5. Track all of it through the state's professional registry tied to Early Achievers.

Required certs you will see in nearly every job posting: infant/child/adult CPR and First Aid, state mandated-reporter, state health and safety course. Many centers also expect ECE coursework or an associate's degree in Early Childhood Education for lead-teacher or director roles.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current pre-service training, fees, CDA-exam eligibility, and Early Achievers requirements with the Washington Department of Children and the Council for Professional Recognition before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

FAQ

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

How much do child care workers actually make in Washington? +
Year-one assistant teacher pay in Washington runs $13-$16/hr — about $27-$33k annually at 40 hours. Lead teachers with a CDA reach $17-$23/hr ($35-$48k). Directors and specialists run $24-$32/hr ($50-$67k). This is the lowest pay floor of any trade on Prentice; national median is $14-$18/hr. The wages reflect a structural funding problem (parent fees + capped state subsidies), not the work's value. Verify your county on the BLS OEWS page for SOC 39-9011.
What credential do I need to work in child care in Washington? +
The national baseline is the CDA (Child Development Associate) through the Council for Professional Recognition — 120 hours of early-childhood education, 480 hours of work experience, a portfolio, a verification visit, and an exam. Roughly $425 in fees, sometimes covered by your state's T.E.A.C.H. scholarship. Washington also licenses the center itself through the Washington Department of Children, and may require state-level pre-service training (CPR/First Aid, mandated-reporter) before you work unsupervised. Verify worker-level rules on the Washington Department of Children page.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current hours, exams, fees, reciprocity, and local add-ons with the official state or local licensing authority before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

Do I need a license to work as a child care worker in Washington? +
Washington licenses centers and family child care homes through the Washington Department of Children. Workers themselves usually need state-level pre-service training (CPR/First Aid, mandated-reporter, state health and safety) before they work unsupervised, and most pursue the CDA on top. Lead teacher and director roles often require ECE coursework or an associate's in Early Childhood Education. Early Achievers (the state's quality-rating system) is what affects subsidy reimbursement and pay floors. Verify the current rule with Washington Department of Children before applying.
How long does it take to become a fully credentialed child care worker in Washington? +
Plan on 1-2 years for the CDA itself — 120 hours of coursework plus 480 hours of work experience plus the portfolio and exam. Lead-teacher roles usually want one to three years on top of that. An associate's in Early Childhood Education through Seattle Central College and Bellevue College — Early Childhood Education AAS, CDA-aligned runs 60-65 credits and typically takes two years full-time. Director-level roles often want a bachelor's plus three to five years of supervisory experience. The CDA itself can be completed while you are paid, working in a licensed center.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current hours, exams, fees, reciprocity, and local add-ons with the official state or local licensing authority before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

Is child care work in demand in Washington? +
Yes. Washington has documented child care shortages — most states do — and the demand has outpaced licensed-center supply across Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane. The state projects 12.9% growth over the next decade. The catch is that demand alone does not lift wages; child care is funded by parent fees plus state subsidies, both of which are capped. Verify the current BLS OEWS and Projections Central pages for SOC 39-9011 before you make a multi-year decision.
Can I really switch into child care work as an adult in Washington? +
Yes — there is no age limit, and centers regularly hire career switchers in their 30s, 40s, and 50s. The honest part is the pay floor: $13-$16/hr ($27-$33k) in year one. Adults who survive the switch usually have one of three things: a working partner, low-rent housing or a paid-off mortgage, or a public pre-K placement that pays on the public-school scale. Without one of those, the math is genuinely hard. Run your survival number before you apply, not after.
How do adults make the pay reality work in Washington? +
Three patterns work in this trade. First, the household has a second income that covers fixed costs while you build credentials and move toward lead-teacher ($17-$23/hr) or director ($24-$32/hr) pay. Second, you target a public pre-K placement, which pays on the public-school scale rather than the private-center scale. Third, you plan toward owning a family child care home after two to three years of center experience plus a CDA — small business, longer hours, higher ceiling. Without one of those three plans, $13-$16/hr is below sustainable income for many adults running a household.

Career switchers procrastinate because they do not know what to ask. This is the script.

  1. Are you a registered apprenticeship program?
  2. How many hours of OJT and classroom instruction are required?
  3. What is the starting wage?
  4. What is the raise schedule?
  5. When do benefits start?
  6. Are classes paid or unpaid?
  7. What nights and times are classes held?
  8. What are the expected book, tool, boot, dues, and fee costs?
  9. Do you place apprentices with contractors, or must I find my own employer?
  10. What happens if I am laid off?
  11. How are hours tracked for licensing?
  12. What percentage of applicants are accepted?
  13. Is there an aptitude test?
  14. What documents are required?
  15. What disqualifies applicants?
  16. Do you accept prior experience or military credit?
  17. What types of work do apprentices mostly do?
  18. Are apprentices expected to travel?
  19. What is the typical commute radius?
  20. What is the program completion rate?

The paid guide includes a checkable, printable version with extra trade-specific questions.

CHILD CARE WORKER IN NEARBY STATES

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Child Care Worker in Washington: page updated March 23, 2026. Source-validated March 22, 2026. 1 source-backed canonical source tracked.

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Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current hours, exams, fees, reciprocity, and local add-ons with the official state or local licensing authority before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

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Program counts are directional inventory signals, not a current census of open seats. Verify current programs, intakes, eligibility, and sponsor status with the official state apprenticeship office before relying.

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