Associate Education Minister David Seymour says early childhood education providers will receive financial relief six months earlier than expected, with increased subsidy payments now set to begin in July 2026 instead of January 2027.
The Government confirmed most ECE services will receive a 1.5 per cent increase to subsidy rates from July, delivering an estimated additional $40 million a year to the sector. Under the previous timetable, the increase would not typically have reached providers until the following January.
Seymour said the move was aimed at easing cost pressures facing childcare centres and preventing further financial strain on families.
“There are few things as important to Kiwi parents as affordable and quality ECE for their children,” he said.
He said providers had warned rising operating costs were forcing centres to either increase fees for parents or scale back parts of their services.
“ECE services shouldn’t have to make either of those decisions. That’s why we brought forward support,” Seymour said.
The announcement comes alongside broader reforms to the early childhood sector, with the Government highlighting recent regulatory changes intended to reduce compliance costs and improve access to childcare.
Among the reforms are plans to reduce the number of licensing criteria by almost 20 per cent, simplify dozens of existing rules, and transfer regulatory functions from the Ministry of Education to the Education Review Office under a new Director of Regulation model.
The Government also plans to introduce graduated enforcement tools for licensing breaches, replacing what Seymour described as “high-stakes open-or-shut rules” that created tension between regulators and centre operators.
Seymour said the reforms were designed to make it easier to establish and operate high-quality centres while maintaining child safety standards.
The Government also pointed to its FamilyBoost childcare rebate scheme, which it says has already assisted more than 92,000 families with support of up to $120 a week towards ECE costs.
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