Childcare Grant 2026/27: How Much Student Parents Can Actually Claim

Radu Danila • 28 May 2026


If you are a parent thinking about going back to university in 2026, the cost of childcare is probably one of the first sums you ran in your head. A toddler in nursery five days a week can cost more than your monthly rent. That single number stops a lot of people from applying, before they ever check whether the system has a route built for them.

It does. Childcare Grant is a tax-free, non-repayable grant from Student Finance England that pays up to 85% of your actual childcare costs while you study. It does not reduce your maintenance loan. It does not get clawed back later. And for the 2026/27 academic year, the maximum weekly payment has risen again, with one important new restriction worth knowing before you apply.


Quick answer: how much is Childcare Grant in 2026/27?

For the 2026/27 academic year, full-time undergraduate students with dependent children can claim up to £199.62 a week for one child, or up to £342.24 a week for two or more children. The grant pays 85% of your actual childcare costs, capped at those weekly maximums. It is tax-free, paid on top of your maintenance loan, and does not need to be repaid. Childcare must be with a registered or approved provider. From 2026/27, nannies no longer count.


Who qualifies for Childcare Grant in 2026/27

You can apply for Childcare Grant if all the following apply:

Part-time students do not qualify for Childcare Grant. If you are studying part-time, you may still claim some of the same childcare costs through the childcare element of Universal Credit, depending on your hours and income. The two systems do not stack.

If you have a partner, both incomes count when Student Finance England works out the grant amount. Your household income changes the size of the maintenance loan but does not, by itself, exclude you from Childcare Grant if you meet the above.


The 2026/27 amounts in practice

The grant pays 85% of what you actually spend on childcare, up to a weekly cap. This is what that looks like at typical childcare costs.

Weekly childcare cost Grant covers (85%) You pay
£100 £85 £15
£150 £127.50 £22.50
£200 £170 £30
£235 (1-child cap) £199.62 max £35.38 plus the rest
£300 (2 children) £255 £45
£402 (2-child cap) £342.24 max £59.76 plus the rest

Two points worth knowing.

The grant is paid in line with your estimated weekly childcare costs at the start of the year. If your actual costs come in lower, Student Finance England recovers the difference at the end of the year through your Confirmation of Childcare Costs (CCG2 form). If your costs come in higher than estimated, you can request an in-year increase.

The cap is per family, not per child beyond two. If you have three or four children in childcare, the maximum is still £342.24 a week. Costs above that come from your own pocket.


The new 2026/27 rule: no nannies

This is the most important change for the 2026/27 academic year, and it is easy to miss.

From August 2026 onwards, childcare provided by a nanny in your own home does not qualify for Childcare Grant, even if the nanny is on the Voluntary Ofsted Childcare Register. This applies to new and returning students. If you currently use a nanny and intend to continue studying into 2026/27, you will need to switch to a registered childminder, nursery, breakfast club, after-school club, or holiday play scheme to keep the grant.

The change matches the wider government move to align student parent support with the rules that already apply to Tax-Free Childcare and the Working Tax Credit childcare element.

If you use a non-registered family member to look after your child, that does not qualify either. The provider has to be on the Ofsted Childcare Register or the equivalent register in Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland.


What you cannot combine Childcare Grant with

You cannot receive Childcare Grant at the same time as any of these:

You can still use the universal 15 or 30 free hours for three-year-olds and four-year-olds. The grant covers the hours your child is in care outside those free hours, where you would otherwise be paying.

If you are on Universal Credit and the childcare element is being paid, the grant route is closed. The arithmetic usually favours the route that gives the higher total. If you are unsure, the Student Loans Company calculator and your UC work coach can each model your specific case.


How to apply for Childcare Grant

The application sits inside your main Student Finance application. You complete the PR1 form (or PR1N if returning), which collects your dependent details, household income, and estimated childcare costs.

The process is:

  1. Apply for your main Student Finance for 2026/27 (open from spring 2026)
  2. Complete the dependant details and Childcare Grant section inside the same application
  3. Submit estimated weekly childcare costs and your provider's Ofsted registration number
  4. After payment starts, complete the CCG2 form to confirm actual childcare costs each term
  5. Final reconciliation happens at the end of the academic year

If your circumstances change mid-year (your partner stops working, your child changes provider, you split up, a new baby arrives), notify Student Finance England within the term the change happens. Late notifications can mean clawback.

For the wider picture on funding adult routes back into university, the Mature Student Finances UK 2026 guide walks through the full stack.


The biggest mistake student parents make

The biggest mistake is assuming Childcare Grant is the same thing as a tax credit and stopping the application early.

Childcare Grant is not means-tested in the way Universal Credit is. There is no hard income cut-off. Some student parents look at "Universal Credit" rules online, assume the household income is too high, and skip the application. Childcare Grant has its own rules. Your eligibility is decided on student status, your dependent children, and whether you are already claiming a clashing benefit. Many student parents with partners earning a normal salary still receive the full grant.

The second mistake is using an unregistered carer (an aunt, a neighbour, a friend) because they are cheaper or more flexible, then not realising the costs do not count toward the grant. The cheap option ends up being more expensive once the grant is added back into the picture.


What happens if you stop being eligible mid-year

If your circumstances change during the year so that you no longer qualify (your child turns 15, your partner starts claiming Tax-Free Childcare, you switch to part-time study), the grant stops from the date of the change. You are not asked to repay what you have already received correctly.

If you withdraw or suspend your studies, Childcare Grant ends from the date you stopped studying. Any grant paid in advance for weeks you were no longer studying must be returned.

Detailed scenarios for withdrawing from study and the funding consequences are covered in the What If I Drop Out University UK Loan in 2026 guide.


Childcare Grant versus other parent support

Support Who it helps Tax-free? Repayable? 2026/27 maximum
Childcare Grant Full-time UG and PGCE student parents Yes No £199.62 / £342.24 per week
Parents' Learning Allowance Full-time UG student parents Yes No Confirmed in spring 2026 (typically just under £2,000 a year)
Adult Dependants' Grant Full-time UG students with an adult dependant Yes No Confirmed in spring 2026
Universal Credit childcare element Working or studying parents (limited) Yes No 85% of costs up to UC cap
Tax-Free Childcare Working parents (limited student access) Yes No £2,000 per child per year (20% top-up)

Most student parents stack Childcare Grant with Parents' Learning Allowance and Adult Dependants' Grant where they qualify. Those three sit on top of the maintenance loan, do not affect each other, and are paid separately during the year.


Instead of asking "Can I afford to study with a child?", ask this

Instead of Better question
Can I afford to study with a child? What does the maintenance loan + Childcare Grant + Parents' Learning Allowance add up to in my case?
Will the loan cover nursery fees? What share of my actual weekly costs would Childcare Grant cover?
Is part-time safer? Does part-time disqualify me from the grant entirely, and what does Universal Credit offer instead?
Should I wait until my child starts school? Is the grant generous enough to start now and let me graduate earlier?

These questions usually open more options than the original blocker.


Before you apply, check the whole funding stack

Childcare Grant is one of three parent-specific grants, sitting alongside Parents' Learning Allowance and the Adult Dependants' Grant. Combined, they can cover most of the gap between the maintenance loan and the actual cost of running a family while studying.

With UniStart, you can:

Explore parent-friendly funding routes at unistart.app/funding


Important

Childcare Grant amounts, eligibility rules, and registered provider requirements depend on your residency, your course, your household composition, and your specific childcare arrangements. The rules summarised here are the published Student Finance England rules for the 2026/27 academic year. This guide is general information only and is not financial advice. Always check your specific position on gov.uk and confirm provider eligibility before signing a childcare contract.


Sources


FAQ

Is Childcare Grant means-tested?

It is income-assessed in a limited way. There is no hard household income cap. The grant is reduced if your household income takes you above certain thresholds for the wider student finance package, but most student parents on average household incomes still receive the full weekly amount.

Can I claim Childcare Grant if my partner stays at home to look after the child?

No. The grant pays for childcare costs you actually incur. If your partner is not in paid employment, education, or unable to work for specified reasons, you are not paying for registered childcare, and the grant does not apply.

Can I use the grant for after-school clubs and holiday play schemes?

Yes, provided the club or scheme is registered or approved. Many parents use the grant for a mix of nursery, after-school care, and holiday cover during term-time weeks of study.

Does Childcare Grant affect my maintenance loan?

No. It is paid separately and on top of your maintenance loan. It does not reduce the loan and does not need to be repaid.

Does Childcare Grant affect my tax position or benefits?

It is tax-free and not counted as income for most income-based benefits. It does interact with Universal Credit, Working Tax Credit, and Tax-Free Childcare, where you cannot claim the childcare element of any of those at the same time.

What happens to Childcare Grant during the summer break?

Childcare Grant is paid for the weeks of the academic year as defined by your course, including any required vacation work. It does not normally cover the summer break, but exceptions apply for accelerated and year-round courses.

My provider is not on the Ofsted register. Can they apply to be added?

For new providers, yes. Childminders working in your own home cannot be added from 2026/27 onwards. Nurseries, after-school clubs, and registered childminders working from their own premises can apply through Ofsted directly.