The government now offers funded childcare for children from 9 months old, but many parents are finding the system confusing, especially when maternity leave and term dates come into play.

If you’re planning your return to work, it’s important to understand when you can actually access the funding, not just when your child becomes eligible.

Here’s what parents need to know.

The “9 Months” Rule Isn’t As Simple As It Sounds

The government advertises that working parents can access 30 hours of free childcare from when their child turns 9 months old

However, the funding does not start immediately when your child turns 9 months

Instead, it starts from the school term after your child reaches 9 months old

This is where many families get caught out.

For example, parents may return to work when their baby turns 9 months, expecting to use funded childcare straight away. But if the child turns 9 months outside the term start window the funding may not begin until the next term

Maternity Leave Makes the Timing Even More Complicated

Another challenge is that maternity leave dates do not line up with school term dates

This means parents must consider three different timelines:

  • When their baby turns 9 months old
  • When they return to work
  • When the next school term begins

Because these dates rarely align perfectly, the time when you can apply for your childcare code and actually use the funding can vary for every family.

Why Parents Often Miss Out on Funding Initially

Many parents assume that as soon as they return to work after maternity leave, they can immediately claim funded childcare.

But in reality, some families have to wait weeks or even months until the next term begins before they can access the funding.

This gap between returning to work and funding starting can create unexpected childcare costs.

There’s Also a Lot of Administration Behind the Scenes

Childcare providers also deal with a significant amount of administration to manage funded places.

Each term, settings must:

  • Enter every child’s funding code
  • Record parent details
  • Log the number of hours each child actually attends
  • Providers can only claim funding for the hours a child attends, not automatically the full 30 hours.

If a child attends multiple childcare settings, the funded hours must also be split correctly between those providers.

This is why childcare providers often ask parents to submit their eligibility codes early, rather than at the last minute.

The Key Thing Parents Should Do

Because everyone’s situation is different, it’s important to check:

Your baby’s birth date
Your planned return-to-work date
The school term dates in your area

Using these together will help you understand when you can apply for your code and when funding will actually start.

Two Tiers of Nursery Inspection? Why Parents Should Be Asking Hard Questions About School-Based Nurseries

The Government’s rapid expansion of school-based nurseries is being framed as a solution to the childcare crisis - more places, more convenience and more support for working families. For many parents, that sounds like a long-awaited step forward. But beneath the...

The Future of Independent Nurseries in the UK: Consolidation, Pressure and What Comes Next

Independent nurseries in the UK are at a crossroads. Over the past few years, large nursery groups and private equity–backed operators have been steadily buying up single-site and small-group providers. This isn’t accidental, it’s structural. And it raises an...

Underfunding childcare is not just a policy choice; it is a decision that directly harms the workforce delivering it.

I have been following someone called ‘The Nursery Survivor’ on Instagram. The account is run by an ex-nursery worker who clearly had some terrible experiences working in nurseries. The short videos are funny and sometimes excruciatingly accurate. She portrays life in...