Licensed Half-Day Programs in Prescott Valley, AZ

Browse DECAL-licensed half-day programs providers in Prescott Valley, Georgia. Filter by age, CAPS acceptance, and ratings. Free parent resource.

0 listings found

🔍

No listings found in Prescott Valley

Try browsing all locations instead.

Half-Day Programs in Prescott Valley

20

Licensed centers

4★

Avg Google rating

6

Rated 4.5+

5

Quality Rated

Prescott Valley sits in the high desert of Yavapai County, a fast-growing community where young families are arriving faster than childcare infrastructure can keep pace. With 20 licensed daycares serving the area, the market is modest in size but carries real weight for parents navigating a competitive landscape with limited options. Right away, a few data points set Prescott Valley apart from the broader Arizona childcare picture in ways every family should understand before starting their search. The city's average Google rating among reviewed providers sits at 4.04 stars, which falls 0.36 points below the Arizona state average of 4.4 stars — a meaningful gap that suggests parents here have had more mixed experiences than their counterparts in larger metros. On subsidy access, the picture is stark: not a single provider in Prescott Valley currently accepts the Child Care Assistance Program, which is Arizona's primary subsidy tool for income-qualifying families, leaving low- and middle-income households to navigate the full cost of care without local provider support. Infant coverage is similarly absent — no licensed center in the city serves children under 12 months, and drop-in care does not exist here at all. What this market does offer is a cluster of earnest, community-rooted programs, some with Quality First ratings, serving toddlers through school-age children in a town that clearly values its children deeply even as its childcare system works to catch up.

🗓 Last updated: June 2026✓ Data verified against AZ licensing records📊 Reviews from Google + parent submissions🏷 Reviewed by Kudzi K., Founder & Editor

What to know about childcare in Prescott Valley

Among Prescott Valley's reviewed providers, four stand out with rated profiles on Google. Leap & Learn Preschool leads the pack with an impressive 4.8 stars across 16 reviews, making it the highest-rated center in the city and a strong first stop for families seeking a preschool-age program with consistent community praise. God's World follows with 4.4 stars from 16 reviews, a faith-based option that resonates with families seeking values-aligned care in a warm, structured environment. Busy Bee Learning Center holds 4.2 stars across a robust 39 reviews — the largest review pool in town, which gives those ratings meaningful weight and makes it a reliable benchmark for the local market. Upside Preschool rounds out the rated group at an even 4.0 stars from 20 reviews, offering families another solid preschool-focused choice. None of these four providers carry NAEYC accreditation, and none currently accept subsidy, so all families should plan for full private-pay arrangements regardless of which program they pursue.

For families in Prescott Valley, the practical realities of this childcare market demand early, strategic action — and a clear-eyed understanding of what the local system can and cannot offer right now. Start with subsidy, because the gap here is significant. The Child Care Assistance Program, known as CCAP, is Arizona's primary vehicle for helping income-qualifying families offset the cost of licensed care. Statewide, many providers accept CCAP certificates, but in Prescott Valley, zero out of 20 licensed providers currently participate in the program. That means even if your household qualifies for assistance based on income and work requirements — and many working families in Yavapai County do — you will not be able to use that benefit at any local center as things currently stand. The Arizona Department of Economic Security administers CCAP applications, and families can still apply through azdes.gov to understand their eligibility, secure a certificate, and advocate for providers to join the program over time. Some families in Prescott Valley ultimately commute to Prescott proper or other nearby communities where CCAP-accepting providers do operate, so it is worth widening your geographic search if subsidy access is essential to your budget. On infant care, the situation is equally urgent for families with newborns. Not a single licensed daycare in Prescott Valley currently serves children under 12 months. If you have an infant or are expecting, this is not a market where you can begin searching at six weeks postpartum and expect to find a spot. Families in this situation should explore in-home daycare providers, nanny shares, or family care arrangements while keeping a close eye on whether any center expands its age range. Contact providers directly and ask to be placed on any informal waiting list — circumstances change, and early relationships with center directors matter. Drop-in care is another service that simply does not exist in Prescott Valley today, with zero providers offering that option. Parents who rely on occasional backup care for irregular work schedules, appointments, or travel need to build their own informal networks — trusted neighbors, family members, or babysitter platforms — rather than counting on a local drop-in center to fill those gaps. Finally, every licensed provider in Prescott Valley is inspected and regulated by the Arizona Department of Health Services, known as ADHS. These inspection records are public, and parents should treat them as essential homework. Visit the ADHS childcare licensing portal online, search by provider name, and review the most recent inspection report before enrolling your child. Look specifically at any cited violations, how quickly they were corrected, and whether patterns appear across multiple inspections. A single minor citation is rarely disqualifying; recurring issues or uncorrected deficiencies deserve serious scrutiny. Five providers in Prescott Valley also carry Quality First ratings, Arizona's tiered quality improvement system running on a one-to-five-star scale — ask any prospective provider directly about their Quality First status, since higher ratings correlate with stronger staff training and program structure.

Parents also ask

Does any daycare in Prescott Valley accept the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP)?

Can I find infant care for my baby under 12 months in Prescott Valley?

Why is Prescott Valley's daycare rating lower than the Arizona state average?

Is there anywhere in Prescott Valley I can drop my child off for occasional or backup care?

How do I check a Prescott Valley daycare's inspection history before enrolling?

Tips for choosing childcare in Prescott Valley

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 Prescott Valley, AZ?

CloverMap lists many DECAL-licensed daycare providers in Prescott Valley, Georgia. All listings have been verified against the Georgia DECAL licensing database.

Do daycares in Prescott Valley accept the CAPS subsidy?

Yes, many DECAL-licensed daycares in Prescott Valley 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 Prescott Valley.

What is the average daycare cost in Prescott Valley, AZ?

Daycare costs in Prescott Valley 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 Prescott Valley?

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 Prescott Valley.

Get spot opening alerts

We'll email you the moment a spot opens — no phone number needed.

Free · No spam · Unsubscribe any time

Get the bi-weekly family digest

New daycares, events, CAPS updates, and guides — delivered free every two weeks.

Own a daycare in Prescott Valley?

Claim your listing to manage your profile and reach more parents.

CloverMapFree, state-verified family resource

Finding great childcare used to feel like finding a four-leaf clover — mostly luck. We built the map so it isn't. Why CloverMap? →

All providers are cross-checked against their state's official licensing database before appearing on CloverMap. Always confirm details directly with each provider before enrolling.

© 2026 CloverMap LLC · All rights reserved

Menu
Share feedback

How's your experience so far? (optional)

Feedback goes directly to the CloverMap team. We read every one.