Young children playing together at a child care center for an article about New Mexico universal child care

New Mexico becomes the first U.S. state to guarantee universal child care

Starting November 1, 2025 C.E., every family in New Mexico will be able to access no-cost child care — regardless of income. Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham and the New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department announced the milestone on September 8, making New Mexico the first state in the nation to guarantee universal child care. For a country where families routinely spend more on early childhood care than on rent, the announcement marks something genuinely new.

At a glance

  • Universal child care: New Mexico removes all income eligibility requirements from its child care assistance program, extending no-cost access to every family in the state — an average savings of $12,000 per child, per year.
  • Provider pay: Programs that pay entry-level staff at least $18 per hour and offer 10 hours of care per day, five days a week, will receive an incentive reimbursement rate to support workforce stability.
  • Six-year foundation: New Mexico’s Early Childhood Education and Care Department, created in 2019 C.E., spent years expanding access for families earning up to 400% of the federal poverty level before taking this final step to full universality.

Why this took six years — and why that matters

New Mexico didn’t declare universality and improvise from there. When the Legislature created the Early Childhood Education and Care Department in 2019 C.E., the goal was always a fully public system. What followed was a deliberate, phased expansion — first to lower-income families, then to those earning up to 400% of the federal poverty level, then finally to everyone. That approach gave the state time to build provider networks, test reimbursement models, and expand capacity before demand surged.

The architecture behind the announcement matters as much as the announcement itself. Universal programs collapse when supply can’t meet demand. New Mexico is trying to get ahead of that problem by simultaneously investing in the workforce that makes the system run.

The state estimates it needs roughly 5,000 additional early childhood professionals to fully sustain universal access. That gap is real, and it won’t close overnight. Tying new funding to an $18-per-hour wage floor for entry-level staff is an attempt to make the field competitive enough to attract and retain workers — a direct acknowledgment that program quality and workforce stability are the same problem.

What American child care has looked like until now

The United States has long been an outlier among wealthy nations on early childhood investment. World Bank research on early childhood development consistently shows that the years before kindergarten are the highest-return window for public investment in human capital — yet the U.S. has left that window almost entirely to the private market.

The results have been predictable. Costs have risen faster than wages for decades. Providers operate on margins so thin that many close when enrollment dips. Brookings Institution analysis has documented how the child care shortage drives women — and particularly mothers of color — out of the workforce entirely. The burden falls heaviest on families who can least afford it.

New Mexico is one of the poorest states in the country by median income. That context is important. The state isn’t making this argument from a position of abundance. It is making it from need — and from a political consensus that treating early childhood education as a public good, the way K-12 schooling is treated, is both the right thing and the economically rational thing to do.

A domestic proof of concept

Countries like Denmark, Iceland, and France have operated universal early childhood systems for years. OECD data on early childhood education shows their outcomes — in maternal workforce participation, child development, and long-term earnings — are consistently strong. But “look at Denmark” has always been easy to dismiss in U.S. policy debates as irrelevant to American conditions.

New Mexico is now the domestic answer to that dismissal. Not a proposal. Not a pilot. A functioning statewide system with a budget, a department, and families already enrolled under the expanded access program. Neal Halfon, a professor of pediatrics and public health at UCLA and director of the Center for Healthier Children, Families, and Communities, called New Mexico’s approach “rooted in data, driven by communities, and becoming a model for the nation.”

The funding mix — oil and gas revenues, state early childhood trust funds, and federal education dollars — will not transfer directly to every other state. Penn Wharton Budget Model analyses of universal early childhood programs suggest long-term economic returns can offset significant upfront costs, but the math will look different in Alabama or Idaho than it does in New Mexico. Replication will require political creativity, not just policy copying.

Still, what New Mexico has demonstrated is that the logistics are solvable and the political will can be built. For states watching closely, that is a different kind of evidence than a report or a projection.

What implementation will test

The history of ambitious public programs includes many that were sound in design and uneven in execution. Provider capacity, administrative systems, and workforce recruitment will all face pressure as families who were previously income-ineligible begin enrolling. The Early Childhood Education and Care Department has more operational experience than most agencies would be starting with — but the jump to full universality is still a significant one.

For families in New Mexico, the guarantee takes effect November 1, 2025 C.E. The distance between a guarantee and a functioning reality is real, and the state will be watched carefully as it closes that gap. What is already true is that no other state has come this far.

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For more on this story, see: Office of the Governor of New Mexico

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