Licensed Daycares in Greensboro, GA
Browse 200 DECAL-licensed daycares in Greensboro, Georgia. Filter by age, CAPS acceptance, and ratings. Free parent resource.
200 listings found
Daycare & Childcare in Greensboro
214
Licensed centers
4.4★
Avg Google rating
86
Rated 4.5+
165
Quality Rated
Greensboro's childcare market is one of the most expansive in North Carolina's Piedmont Triad, with 214 licensed daycares serving families across a city that has grown steadily into a hub for young professionals, military families, and multigenerational households alike. That scale matters: 214 licensed facilities means real choice for most families, yet the range in quality, program philosophy, and financial accessibility varies enough that knowing how to navigate the market is just as important as knowing it exists. Greensboro's centers hold an average Google rating of 4.44 stars, a small but meaningful edge above the North Carolina state average of 4.38 stars, and that consistency across a large market signals something genuine — these are programs that have earned parental trust at scale, not just in a handful of boutique settings. On the subsidy front, 52 percent of Greensboro's licensed daycares accept the Subsidized Child Care Program, one percentage point above the state average of 51 percent, which is genuinely encouraging news for working families navigating tight budgets. More than half the market is financially accessible with assistance, and that's not something every North Carolina city can claim. Where Greensboro's market reveals a significant gap is in infant care: precisely zero of the 214 licensed providers currently serve children under 12 months. For families with newborns or parents returning from parental leave, that number is not a footnote — it is the central planning challenge this market presents, and it requires action well before a baby arrives. Drop-in care is similarly absent, with zero providers offering that flexibility, meaning parents who need occasional or unscheduled care will need to build backup networks through family, neighbors, or informal arrangements rather than relying on the licensed childcare sector. What makes Greensboro distinctive is the combination of genuine breadth, above-average quality ratings, and a subsidy-friendly majority — a strong foundation undermined by a structural infant care void that demands early and aggressive planning.
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What to know about childcare in Greensboro
Among the 86 providers rated four stars or higher in Greensboro, five have accumulated enough Google reviews to offer families a statistically meaningful signal of sustained quality. Childcare Network #207 leads the group with a remarkable 4.8 stars across 157 reviews, making it the highest-rated center in the dataset and an excellent choice for families prioritizing consistent, well-reviewed programming — it also accepts subsidy, removing the financial barrier for eligible families. Hayes-Taylor YMCA Childcare and Islamic Day Care Center of Greensboro both earn 4.7 stars, with Hayes-Taylor drawing on 381 reviews — the largest review base in the city — which lends its rating particular credibility given the volume of parent feedback behind it. The YMCA's deep community ties make it a natural fit for families who value wraparound programming and extended-hours flexibility, and it accepts subsidy. The Islamic Day Care Center of Greensboro, with 202 reviews at 4.7 stars, serves families seeking values-aligned care in a faith-informed environment while remaining open to the broader community, and also accepts subsidy. Childcare Network #157 matches the 4.7-star mark with 86 reviews and accepts subsidy as well, while Childcare Network #162 rounds out the top five at 4.2 stars across 84 reviews, also subsidy-accepting. Notably, none of these five providers hold NAEYC accreditation, and none serve infants — parents of children under twelve months will need to look beyond this top tier entirely. For families whose children are toddler-age or older, however, these five represent a strong, subsidy-accessible starting point for tours and enrollment conversations.
Greensboro's geography shapes childcare access in ways that aren't immediately obvious from a city-wide count of 214 licensed providers. The corridors where families actually live and commute tell a more nuanced story, and the neighborhoods appearing in provider location data — Randleman Road, Rankin Road, West Florida Street, Acorn, Adams Farm Parkway, and Alamance Church Road — each have a distinct character worth understanding before a family commits to a search radius. The Randleman Road corridor, running south through the city, tends to attract a mix of community-oriented and faith-affiliated programs that align with the working-class and lower-middle-income households concentrated there; subsidy-accepting centers are well represented in this corridor, making it one of the more financially accessible stretches for families relying on the Subsidized Child Care Program. Rankin Road, in the city's eastern reaches, skews toward smaller, owner-operated facilities that offer more intimate group sizes, which can appeal to families transitioning toddlers from home care for the first time. West Florida Street serves neighborhoods where commute patterns from downtown and the I-40 corridor create demand for centers with flexible drop-off windows, though parents should confirm hours carefully given that drop-in care is unavailable city-wide. The Acorn area and Adams Farm Parkway, both in the southwestern quadrant, reflect the city's suburban expansion, with a growing concentration of larger chain-affiliated centers — the Childcare Network locations draw from this part of the city — that offer structured curricula and often have the staffing depth to support Star Rated License programming. Alamance Church Road, closer to the city's southeastern edge, sits at the boundary of Greensboro's licensed provider coverage; families in this corridor will find fewer immediate options and may need to broaden their search toward adjacent zip codes or plan around longer commutes to reach high-rated, subsidy-accepting centers. Across all corridors, 165 of Greensboro's 214 providers hold a Star Rated License, meaning the vast majority of options — regardless of neighborhood — meet a verified quality threshold parents can investigate through DCDEE records before ever scheduling a tour.
For families who qualify financially, the Subsidized Child Care Program is the most important tool in Greensboro's childcare market, and with 52 percent of the city's 214 licensed providers participating — slightly above the state average — there is genuine reach. Eligibility is determined by income, family size, and work or training status, and applications are processed through the Guilford County Department of Social Services. Parents can begin the process online at ncchildcare.ncdhhs.gov or by contacting DSS directly, and it's worth starting that process early because subsidy approval timelines can run several weeks, meaning a family that waits until they need care to apply may face a gap. Knowing that more than half of Greensboro's licensed centers accept subsidy is useful, but parents should verify participation for any specific center before enrolling, since provider participation can change. On infant care, the data is unambiguous and sobering: zero of Greensboro's 214 licensed providers currently serve children under 12 months. This is not a gap that can be solved by searching harder or driving farther within city limits — it is a structural reality of this market. Families expecting a baby should begin exploring options during pregnancy, maintain contact with multiple centers, and ask specifically about waitlists for infant rooms that may open as the sector evolves. Drop-in care presents a parallel challenge: with zero providers offering that option in Greensboro, parents who need occasional unscheduled coverage — for a work call, a medical appointment, a childcare breakdown — must rely entirely on informal networks, family, or paid individual caregivers rather than licensed centers. Finally, every parent should use DCDEE's inspection records as a baseline before touring any facility. The Division of Child Development and Early Education maintains publicly accessible licensing and inspection history at ncchildcare.ncdhhs.gov; searching by provider name reveals visit dates, any cited violations, and current Star Rated License levels across all 165 Greensboro providers holding that certification. Make this the first step, not the last.
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Parents also ask
How do I apply for the Subsidized Child Care Program in Greensboro, and how many daycares actually accept it?
Are there any daycares in Greensboro that accept infants under 12 months?
Does Greensboro have any NAEYC-accredited daycares?
Can I find drop-in or occasional daycare in Greensboro for backup childcare needs?
How do Greensboro's daycare quality ratings compare to the rest of North Carolina?
Tips for choosing childcare in Greensboro
Verify Licensing
Always confirm that a daycare holds a valid state license. Licensed centers meet health, safety, and staffing requirements.
Read Parent Reviews
Reviews from other parents give real insight into daily routines, staff quality, and how facilities are maintained.
Ask About Curriculum
Whether play-based, Montessori, or STEM-focused — the right curriculum can have a lasting impact on your child's development.
Consider Schedule Fit
Make sure operating hours, program types, and flexibility match your family's daily schedule and work commitments.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many licensed daycares are in Greensboro, GA?
CloverMap lists 200 DECAL-licensed daycare providers in Greensboro, Georgia. All listings have been verified against the Georgia DECAL licensing database.
Do daycares in Greensboro accept the CAPS subsidy?
Yes, many DECAL-licensed daycares in Greensboro accept Georgia's CAPS childcare subsidy, which can reduce your childcare cost significantly depending on your income. Use CloverMap's CAPS filter to find accepting providers in Greensboro.
What is the average daycare cost in Greensboro, GA?
Daycare costs in Greensboro typically range from $700–$2,200/month depending on the child's age and care type. Infant care is the most expensive ($1,100–$2,200/month), while preschool-age care averages $700–$1,400/month. NAEYC-accredited centers run about 20% higher than average.
What should I look for when choosing a daycare in Greensboro?
Look for DECAL licensure (required in Georgia), staff-to-child ratios, curriculum type (Montessori, play-based, faith-based), age group coverage, CAPS acceptance, and parent reviews. CloverMap lets you filter by all of these criteria for daycares in Greensboro.
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