Categories: Workplaces

10 Companies Offering Free (& Almost Free) Childcare

When Marissa Mayer took over as the CEO of Yahoo! in July of 2012, her initial company-wide decisions made news. First, she put an end to Yahoo!’s famously lenient work-from-home policy, and then she built herself an in-office nursery for her newborn. If the on-site work requirements put a wrench in the schedules of many working mothers, Mayer’s office nursery seemed to signal a commitment to at-work support for the same population. (Plenty of Yahoo! employees nonetheless took umbrage, pointing out that Mayer’s “bring your kid to work” approach was a privileged personal decision unavailable to most employees.)

Yahoo! still has plenty of work to do in accommodating working parents, but they’re also leading a charge for on-site childcare, an increasingly demanded job benefit amongst young professionals. While free childcare is like a white whale for job benefits—given that the average annual cost of center-based daycare is nearly $12,000 in the United States, fully employer-subsidized childcare is unlikely to ever become a cultural norm—on-site and subsidized childcare has become a priority for job searchers.

Companies like the employee-owned Publix Super Markets, Inc. corporation have not only put forth huge money into the partial funding of employee child care, they’re getting good results from the investment. According to a report from the National Conference of State Legislatures cited by Bloomberg, employers have continually offered reasons why offsite childcare can reduce employee productivity and happiness. For example, nine out of ten companies surveyed reported that childcare was the source of “absenteeism and tardiness” while 80% of companies said that childcare requirements can cut the work-day short. When employees are consumed with the mechanics of expensive and offsite childcare, they’re less available during traditional work hours.

With all of that in mind, take a look at our list—which is in no particular order—of 10 companies offering free, almost free and on-site childcare to their employees.

  1. Yahoo! (on-site child care)
  2. Google (on-site subsidized child care)
  3. Publix Super Markets, Inc. (on-site subsidized child care)
  4. Aflac (offsite subsidized child care)
  5. Men’s Wearhouse (subsidized on-site daycare)
  6. SAS (on-site subsidized preschool)
  7. Atlantic Health (on-site daycare)
  8. Bright Horizons (discounted on-site child care)
  9. USAA (onsite child development centers)
  10. Facebook (credit towards childcare)
Jay

Jay is a Philadelphia-based freelance writer and music journalist.

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