Albanese Government locks in pay rise for early educators while limiting fees for families

ANTHONY ALBANESE MP
PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA

JASON CLARE MP
MINISTER FOR EDUCATION

AMANDA RISHWORTH MP
MINISTER FOR EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE RELATIONS

SENATOR JESS WALSH
MINISTER FOR YOUTH
MINISTER FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION

 

Every day early educators help children learn, grow and get ready for school.

It’s one of the most important jobs in the country and they should be paid fairly for that work.

That’s why the Albanese Government funded a 15 per cent pay rise for Early Education and Care Workers.

Today, the Albanese Government is investing a further $3.6 billion over the next two years to lock in this historic 15 per cent pay rise for early childhood educators.

This investment will be tied to a commitment from Child Care Centres to limit fee increases. We want to make sure workers can be fairly paid without the costs being passed on to families.

When combined with our support for minimum wage rises, this will mean $255 more per week for a typical full-time educator and $410 more per week for early childhood teachers, compared to December 2024 when the Government first implemented the pay rise.

For the first time employees in the Family Day Care and In-Home Care sectors will also be eligible for the payment, starting from July. More information on applications and criteria will be available soon.

Keeping costs for families down

This funding will continue to be tied to a commitment from services receiving the payment to limit fee increases for parents.

We are making sure workers can be fairly paid without the costs being passed on to families.

That’s helping to ease cost-of-living pressure while delivering better early learning for children.

This is part of the Albanese Government’s work to make early education and care more affordable, more accessible and high quality.

We also introduced the 3 Day Guarantee this year to make sure every child who needs it is eligible for three days of subsidised early learning each week, no matter what their parents do.

Strengthening safety

The Government will now require services to meet the national safety standard as a condition of the payment.

Today 95 per cent of early learning services are meeting the safety standard, more than ever before, but we want that number to be higher.

From July 2027, if services don’t meet the National Quality Standard when it comes to safety, their funding will be cut or suspended.

Parents deserve confidence that their child is safe in care.

If a service is not meeting the standard that parents expect and children deserve, it risks this funding being cut off.

This requirement builds on the Albanese Government’s reforms to strengthen safety in early education and care.

More educators, lower costs

The payment has worked to bolster our early educator workforce and keep costs for families down.

Since it was announced: 

  • There are around 20,000 more ECEC workers, about an 8 per cent increase.
  • Job vacancies in early education have decreased by almost 31 per cent.
  • Fees at centres receiving the payment have grown at around half the rate of centres that don’t.
  • The percentage of services operating with a staffing waiver has fallen from 8.9 per cent to 5.1 per cent.
  • Use of casual staff by Australia’s largest child care provider, Goodstart Early Learning, fell by 5 per cent and use of agency staff decreased by 69 per cent in the first year of the program.
As at 17 June 2026