Estimate the total cost of raising a child from birth to age 18 based on USDA data. Adjust for region, income level, and family size.
According to USDA estimates, the average middle-income family spends approximately $233,610 to raise a child from birth to age 17 — and that's before college. Adjusted for inflation, that figure continues to climb. Housing, food, childcare, education, and transportation make up the largest shares of this total.
Costs vary dramatically by region, income level, and family size. Families in the urban Northeast spend roughly 8% more than the national average, while rural families spend about 2% less. Higher-income families spend more in absolute terms but a smaller percentage of income. Each additional child costs less per child due to shared bedrooms, hand-me-downs, and bulk purchasing.
This calculator helps you estimate your total cost based on your specific situation, breaking it down by year and by major expense category so you can plan decades ahead. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation.
Understanding the full financial commitment of raising a child helps with long-term planning, retirement savings adjustments, and lifestyle decisions. This calculator gives you a personalized estimate rather than relying on national averages, accounting for your income, location, and family structure. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Base Annual Cost = $233,610 ÷ 18 ≈ $12,978/year (middle income) Region Adjustment: Northeast +8%, South −2%, West +4%, Midwest −3%, Rural −2% Income Adjustment: Low income ×0.73, High income ×1.33 Multiple Children: 2 children ×0.93 each, 3+ children ×0.84 each Remaining Cost = Annual Cost × (18 − Current Age)
Result: $181,074 remaining to age 18
Base annual: $12,978. West adjustment (+4%): $13,497. Two-child discount (×0.93): $12,552/year per child. Remaining years: 18 − 3 = 15. Total remaining: $12,552 × 15 = $188,282. Middle-income bracket applies at $80K household income.
The USDA has published its "Expenditures on Children by Families" report since 1960. The most recent edition provides the $233,610 baseline figure for middle-income, married-couple families with two children. This comprehensive study tracks housing, food, transportation, clothing, healthcare, education, and miscellaneous expenses.
The USDA figure doesn't include college, lost wages from career pauses, opportunity costs of parental time, or pregnancy and birth expenses. When these are factored in, some economists estimate the true cost exceeds $500,000 per child.
Proactive financial planning makes a significant difference. Building a dedicated child expense fund, maximizing tax credits, choosing cost-effective childcare, and avoiding lifestyle inflation as income grows all help keep spending manageable while still providing quality care and experiences.
The USDA estimates $233,610 for a middle-income family, not including college. Low-income families spend about $174,690, while higher-income families spend around $372,210. These figures are in 2015 dollars and should be inflation-adjusted.
Teenagers (ages 15-17) are the most expensive due to higher food consumption, transportation costs (car insurance), activities, and clothing. Infant years are also costly due to childcare and gear purchases.
Yes. The USDA finds that families with three or more children spend about 16% less per child than families with two children, and two-child families spend about 7% less per child than one-child families, due to shared resources.
No. The $233,610 estimate covers birth through age 17 only. College adds $25,000-$55,000 per year depending on institution type. A separate 529 savings plan is recommended.
The urban Northeast is the most expensive region, roughly 8% above the national average. Rural areas are about 2% below average. Housing costs are the primary driver of regional differences.
Lower-income families spend about 27% of income per child, while higher-income families spend about 16%. The national middle-income average is roughly 20% of before-tax income per child.