How Much Does a Baby Cost in the First Year?
Calculate first-year baby costs. Diapers, formula, childcare, gear, and medical expenses itemized.
First Year Baby Costs
The USDA estimates the average cost of a baby's first year at $12,000-15,000 for a middle-income family. The biggest variable: childcare. A stay-at-home parent arrangement costs $0 in direct childcare but sacrifices income. Daycare centers average $1,000-2,000/month depending on location. A full-time nanny costs $2,500-4,000/month.
Where to Save vs Where to Spend
Save on: Clothing (babies outgrow sizes in weeks — buy secondhand), toys (babies under 6 months do not need many), nursery furniture (a safe crib and changing pad are essentials; the rest is optional). Spend on: Car seat (never buy used — crash history unknown), crib mattress (safety standards change), and health insurance (unexpected NICU stays cost $3,000-10,000/day).
The average hospital birth in the US costs $2,000-5,000 out-of-pocket with insurance (deductible + copay). Without insurance: $10,000-30,000 for vaginal delivery, $15,000-50,000 for C-section. Verify your insurance coverage and hospital costs before delivery — surprise bills are common.