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🚨 CHILDCARE IN IRELAND: WE ARE LOSING MORE THAN PLACES. WE ARE LOSING CAPACITY. WE ARE LOSING SERVICES. WE ARE LOSING OU...
15/06/2026

🚨 CHILDCARE IN IRELAND: WE ARE LOSING MORE THAN PLACES. WE ARE LOSING CAPACITY. WE ARE LOSING SERVICES. WE ARE LOSING OUR FUTURE.

Three years ago, providers stood before policymakers and warned what was coming.

Today, we are no longer discussing warnings.

We are discussing reality.

🔴 More than 1,000 early years services have left the sector in recent years.

🔴 That represents over 25% of all early years services in Ireland.

🔴 Parents are travelling further to secure childcare and ECCE places.

🔴 Rooms are sitting empty because educators cannot be recruited.

🔴 Educators and providers are experiencing record levels of stress and burnout.

🔴 Capacity continues to shrink while demand continues to grow.

And perhaps the most important question of all:

How did we get here?

Over the last two years alone, Government has allocated €90 million in direct funding specifically to support wage increases within the sector.

The fact that this funding was required tells its own story.

If providers could absorb rising wage costs through normal business operations, that funding would never have been needed.

The Labour Court recognised educators deserved better pay.

Providers agreed.

Government agreed.

But the reality was clear.

The money simply wasn’t there.

Costs continue to rise.

Wages continue to rise.

Insurance, utilities, compliance and regulation continue to rise.

Yet the ability of many providers to generate additional revenue remains heavily restricted through policy, fee controls and historical fee freezes.

The economics no longer add up.

And when a business model becomes unsustainable, the consequences are inevitable:

❌ Investment stops.
❌ Expansion stops.
❌ Recruitment becomes harder.
❌ Rooms close.
❌ Places are lost.
❌ Services disappear.

This is not a provider issue.

This is not an educator issue.

This is not a parent issue.

This is an Ireland issue.

Because childcare is not simply a service.

It is essential infrastructure.

When childcare services close:

Children lose opportunities.

Parents lose choice.

Employers lose workers.

Communities lose vital services.

The economy feels the impact.

The warning signs are no longer ahead of us.

They are around us.

The evidence has been presented.

The experiences have been shared.

The reality cannot continue to be ignored.

Now is the time for action.

12/06/2026

⚠️CHILDCARE IN IRELAND: THE WARNING SIGNS ARE NO LONGER AHEAD OF US⚠️

Three years ago, providers stood before policymakers and outlined exactly where the sector was heading.

We warned about sustainability.

We warned about staffing shortages.

We warned about service closures.

We warned about provider burnout.

We warned about capacity loss.

We warned that if the underlying economics of the sector were not addressed, the consequences would eventually be felt by children, families, communities and the wider economy.

Today, we are no longer discussing warnings.

We are discussing reality.

Across Ireland, childcare places are becoming harder to access.

Parents are travelling further than ever to secure ECCE and childcare places.

Services have closed.

Rooms are sitting empty.

Not because there is no demand.

Not because there are no children.

But because there are not enough educators available to keep them open.

At the same time, educators and providers are experiencing some of the highest levels of stress and burnout ever recorded within the sector.

Our recent peer-reviewed research with Dublin City University highlighted significant concerns around provider wellbeing, mental health and sustainability.

The evidence is clear.

The pressure is real.

And the warning signs are all around us.

Perhaps the most alarming statistic of all is that more than 1,000 early years services have left the sector in recent years.

For context, that represents over 25% of all early years services in Ireland.

Imagine if over 25% of primary schools disappeared.

Imagine if over 25% of GP practices disappeared.

Imagine if over 25% of fire stations disappeared.

There would be national outrage.

Yet this is happening within a sector that supports hundreds of thousands of children, parents and employers every single day.

This is not simply a childcare issue.

It is a national infrastructure issue.

When childcare services close:

Children lose access.

Parents lose choice.

Employers lose workers.

Communities lose vital services.

The economy feels the impact.

What has become increasingly clear is that many of the challenges being discussed are not separate issues.

Staffing shortages.

Recruitment difficulties.

Provider burnout.

Capacity loss.

Service closures.

Historical fee freezes.

Core Funding challenges.

These are not isolated problems.

They are all symptoms of one central issue.

Provider sustainability.

The childcare sector is not short of children.

It is not short of demand.

It is not short of dedicated educators.

What it is increasingly short of is sustainable providers.

And without sustainable providers there can be no sustainable childcare system.

One of the clearest examples of the financial reality facing providers can be found in the Government’s own actions.

Over the last two years, approximately €90 million in additional funding has been allocated specifically to support wage increases within the sector.

That fact alone tells a powerful story.

Because if providers were operating with sufficient margins, if services had the financial capacity to absorb increasing employment costs, this funding would never have been required.

The Labour Court recognised that educators deserved better pay.

Providers agreed.

Government agreed.

Yet even after those decisions were made, tens of millions of euro in additional funding were still required because the money simply was not available within the existing system.

This is not evidence that providers were unwilling to pay higher wages.

It is evidence that many providers could not.

That distinction matters.

For most businesses, wage growth comes from growth.

From increased turnover.

From increased revenue.

From improved margins.

But childcare providers are operating in an environment where:

Costs continue to rise.

Wages continue to rise.

Regulatory obligations continue to rise.

Expectations continue to rise.

Yet the ability to generate additional revenue has been heavily restricted through years of fee controls, fee freezes and funding structures that do not always reflect the true cost of delivery.

In simple terms:

The costs of delivering childcare have increased dramatically.

The ability to generate additional income has not.

That is not a sustainable business model.

And when a business model becomes unsustainable, the consequences are inevitable.

Investment stops.

Expansion stops.

Recruitment becomes difficult.

Rooms close.

Places are lost.

Services disappear.

The sector is not asking for special treatment.

It is not asking for sympathy.

It is asking for recognition of reality.

Providers have embraced regulation.

Providers have embraced quality frameworks.

Providers have embraced inspections.

Providers have embraced workforce reforms.

Educators continue to show extraordinary commitment to the children in their care.

Parents continue to place their trust in the sector every day.

Everyone has continued carrying their share of the burden.

But there comes a point where carrying more is no longer possible.

The greatest risk facing childcare in Ireland today is not affordability.

It is not recruitment.

It is not administration.

The greatest risk is the continued loss of provider capacity.

Because without providers there are no places.

Without places there is no access.

Without access there is no affordability.

Without sustainability there is no system.

The conversation must now move beyond acknowledging the challenges.

The evidence has been presented.

The experiences have been shared.

The statistics are clear.

The question is no longer whether a problem exists.

The question is whether we are prepared to act before more places are lost, more services close, more educators leave and more families are left without the support they need.

The warning signs are no longer ahead of us.

They are around us.

And the time for action is now.

Today, representatives of the Federation of Early Childhood Providers and DCU will meet with Ministers, TDs, Senators an...
09/06/2026

Today, representatives of the Federation of Early Childhood Providers and DCU will meet with Ministers, TDs, Senators and senior Government officials in Leinster House to discuss the realities facing childcare providers across Ireland.

We will be raising issues that providers tell us about every day:

✔️ Sustainability pressures
✔️ Staffing shortages
✔️ Capacity loss and service closures
✔️ Historical fee freezes and rates
✔️ Core Funding challenges
✔️ Provider wellbeing
✔️ Workforce retention
✔️ Access to childcare for families

And more…

Over recent years, providers have adapted, invested, complied with increasing regulation and continued to support children, families and communities despite mounting challenges.

Today is about ensuring those voices are heard.

The message we will bring is simple:

Without sustainable providers, there can be no sustainable childcare system.

A sustainable childcare system requires:
• Sustainable providers
• Sustainable staffing models
• Sustainable funding
• Sustainable access for families

We look forward to engaging constructively with policymakers and ensuring the experiences of providers throughout Ireland form part of future discussions and decisions.

If you are a childcare provider and would like to strengthen the voice of the sector, we invite you to join us.

Together we are stronger.
Together we are heard.
Together we create change.

08/06/2026

LETTER from ELAINE DUNNE FEDERATION OF CHILDHOOD PROVIDERS

PLEASE SHARE

When more than 1,000 services have closed since 2019 in this country, serious questions must be asked. Unless meaningful action is taken, many more services will continue to close or withdraw from government schemes simply to keep their doors open.

We must ask why this issue is not receiving the attention it deserves. The scale of the crisis is being downplayed, while providers, educators, employers, and families are facing increasing pressure. We cannot stand by and watch more of our colleagues being forced out of business.

The latest report from employers highlights the challenges facing the sector. As Early Years providers, we are employers too, and we cannot remain viable if government funding arrangements continue to make our services financially unsustainable.

The Federation of Early Childhood Providers (FECP) is calling on all Early Years Services, Early Years Educators, employers, and parents across the country to come together for a united public discussion on the future of our sector. We must work collectively to identify the changes needed to ensure sustainable, high-quality Early Years services for children, families, educators, and providers.

Core Funding is having a significant negative impact on many services. The time for unity is now. Together, we can advocate for the changes necessary to secure the future of Early Years education and care.

Many thanks,

Elaine Dunne
Chairperson, Federation of Early Childhood Providers (FECP)

04/06/2026

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN POLICY IS DESIGNED WITHOUT PROVIDER INPUT?

Most childcare providers support positive change.

They support improvements.

They support quality.

They support accountability.

And they support policies that genuinely benefit children, families and staff.

But there is one question that should always be asked whenever a new policy, requirement or initiative is introduced:

Were providers properly consulted?

Because the difference between a policy that works and a policy that struggles often comes down to one thing:

Practical experience.

Providers are the people implementing policy on the ground every single day.

They understand:

* the realities of staffing
* the realities of sustainability
* the realities of compliance
* the realities of supporting children and families
* and the realities of operating services in communities across Ireland

When provider voices are included early, policies are often stronger, more practical and more effective.

When provider voices are missing, unintended consequences can emerge that nobody anticipated during development.

That is why meaningful consultation matters.

Not as a box-ticking exercise.

Not after decisions have already been made.

But as a genuine partnership between policymakers and the people delivering services every day.

At the Federation of Early Childhood Providers, one of our most important roles is ensuring provider voices are brought directly into discussions with government departments, policymakers and key stakeholders.

Because those closest to the challenges are often closest to the solutions.

The future of the sector will be strongest when policy is shaped with providers, not simply for providers.

What is one policy, requirement or change that you believe would have benefited from greater provider input before implementation?

WHY MANY PROVIDERS RARELY SWITCH OFFFor many childcare providers, the working day doesn’t end when the last child goes h...
02/06/2026

WHY MANY PROVIDERS RARELY SWITCH OFF

For many childcare providers, the working day doesn’t end when the last child goes home.

The doors may close.

But the responsibility doesn’t.

There are emails still to answer.

Staff queries to deal with.

Rosters to review.

Policies to update.

Funding applications to complete.

Parent concerns to address.

Maintenance issues to organise.

Compliance requirements to monitor.

Plans to make for tomorrow, next week and next month.

Running a childcare service often means carrying a constant mental checklist.

Even during family time.

Even at weekends.

Even on holidays.

Many providers don’t simply work in their service.

They carry the service with them.

Because when you are responsible for children, families, staff and the future of a business, switching off is often easier said than done.

This is one of the hidden realities of leadership within the early years sector.

It requires resilience.

It requires commitment.

And it requires an extraordinary level of dedication that is rarely seen by those outside the sector.

At the Federation of Early Childhood Providers, we regularly hear from providers and managers who are balancing enormous responsibilities while continuing to deliver exceptional services for their communities.

Their commitment should never be taken for granted.

As conversations continue around sustainability, workforce planning and the future of the sector, it is important to recognise not just the financial pressures providers face, but the personal pressures too.

Because behind every successful childcare service is someone carrying far more responsibility than most people realise.

When was the last time you truly switched off from thinking about your service?

Elaine Dunne
30/05/2026

Elaine Dunne

TURNOVER DOES NOT EQUAL PROFIT

One of the biggest misconceptions about running a childcare service is that a full service automatically means a profitable service.

The reality is far more complex.

When people hear that a childcare service has thousands of euro flowing through its accounts each year, many assume the owner must be doing exceptionally well financially.

What they rarely see are the costs behind those figures.

Staff wages.

Employer contributions.

Insurance.

Utilities.

Rates.

Rent or mortgage repayments.

Maintenance.

Training.

Compliance requirements.

Resources.

Software systems.

Administration.

Professional services.

And a growing list of operational expenses that continue to rise year after year.

A childcare service can appear successful from the outside while operating under enormous financial pressure behind the scenes.

This is why headline figures rarely tell the full story.

Turnover is what comes in.

Profit is what remains after every bill, every obligation and every responsibility has been paid.

Understanding that distinction is critical when discussing sustainability, funding models and the future of childcare provision in Ireland.

At the Federation of Early Childhood Providers, we continue to raise awareness of the real financial realities facing providers and ensure those realities are represented in discussions with policymakers and decision-makers.

Because assumptions do not keep services open.

Sustainable funding and informed policy do.

Have you ever had someone assume that because your service was busy, it must automatically be highly profitable?

Share your experience below. 👇

Elaine Dunne
30/05/2026

Elaine Dunne

THE PRESSURE OF BEING RESPONSIBLE FOR FAMILIES, STAFF AND CHILDREN

Running a childcare service is not simply a job.

For many providers, it is a responsibility they carry every single day, often long after they leave the building.

Because behind every service are real people depending on it.

Children depending on consistency, care and support.

Parents depending on reliable childcare so they can work, study and provide for their families.

Staff depending on secure employment, leadership and stability.

And providers carrying the responsibility of making all of that work together in an increasingly challenging environment.

What many outside the sector do not fully see is the constant balancing act providers face every day:

* supporting children
* supporting families
* supporting staff
* maintaining quality
* meeting compliance requirements
* managing rising costs
* solving daily operational challenges
* and trying to keep services sustainable for the future

It is a level of responsibility that few sectors truly understand.

And while providers continue showing extraordinary resilience, passion and professionalism, the pressure being carried across the sector is very real.

At the Federation of Early Childhood Providers, we believe those realities must continue to be recognised in policy discussions, funding conversations and future planning for the sector.

Because sustainable childcare services are not built on goodwill alone.

They require support, understanding, realistic policy and meaningful engagement with the people operating services on the ground every day.

To every provider carrying that responsibility daily:
Your work matters.
Your challenges are real.
And your voice deserves to be heard.

What is one responsibility people outside the sector often underestimate most about running a childcare service?

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