New data finds half a million children already benefitting from 15 hours extended childcare offer as applications open for tens of thousands more from today.
Tens of thousands more working parents across England will soon see cash back in their pockets as they can now apply for 30 hours of funded childcare from September.
From today (12 May), all eligible working parents of children who will be 9 months old before 1 September can apply to access up to 30 hours of funded childcare a week, saving them up to GBP7,500 a year per child.
With savings from the government's free breakfast club rollout and school uniform cap, this rises to up to GBP8,000 for working parents who also have school-aged children, every year.
This latest milestone follows the successful rollout of 15 funded hours for children from 9 months last September, with 499,592 children already benefitting from access to more affordable and high-quality early years education and childcare.
Despite the inherited delivery challenges, the government is committed to increasing access to childcare that gives every child the best start in life. That's why through the Plan for Change it has already taken urgent action through hundreds of new school-based nurseries and a GBP2 billion extra investment compared to last year to support the brilliant existing providers deliver the 35,000 additional staff and 70,000 places required to meet demand for September.
A new government survey of parents who took up the childcare entitlements last September has found that the rollout is breaking down barriers to opportunity and playing a key role in supporting British business and kick-starting economic growth.
Lower-income families are seeing the biggest impact, with one in five of those earning GBP20,000 - GBP40,000 having increased their working hours thanks to the 15 hours brought in last year.
Looking ahead to this September, of the 2,723 respondents who are planning to increase their childcare hours, over half (1,425) are intending to up their work hours too - good news for families, and good news for employers.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said:
This government has a clear Plan for Change to break the unfair link between background and opportunity across this country, which starts by ensuring our children start school ready to learn.
Early years is my number one priority, and making sure families are able to benefit from this rollout is a promise made, and promise kept. But this is just the beginning.
Through the hard work of the sector, supported by our record investment, landmark school-based nursery rollout and focus on vital early learning support, we will deliver an early years system that gives every child the best start in life.
The success of the rollout so far is testament to the work and commitment of nurseries, pre-schools and childminders, alongside local authorities, with 6123 of 6337 respondents who applied for government-funded hours last Autumn going on to secure a place.
Source: Gov.uk