Church-housed daycare is one of the larger but least-cataloged segments of the San Diego early-childhood market. Most family searches start at the nearest big-box center; church-housed programs sit quietly in the basements, parish halls, and side wings of houses of worship across the city, often at tuition rates 10 to 25 percent below comparable secular peers. This roundup covers Catholic parish schools, mainline Protestant church preschools, Jewish day schools, and Christian K to 12 feeder programs across San Diego, with notes on what each model offers and what to ask on a tour.
All picks are editorial. We have not been paid by any program below. For the full city overview, including subsidies, public pre-K, and licensing rules, see our San Diego daycare guide.
Church daycare is an umbrella term that covers several distinct program models. Most common is a daycare or preschool housed inside a church building and operated by the congregation as a community ministry. The next is a parochial school's early-childhood department (most common in the Catholic, Lutheran, and Reform Jewish traditions), which feeds the school's elementary program. The third is a center that simply leases space from a church without theological involvement.
For families weighing these options, two questions resolve most confusion. First, is the program state-licensed under California Community Care Licensing Division (CCLD) under Title 22, Division 12, Chapter 1 (Child Care Centers) and Chapter 3 (Family Child Care Homes), with a 1:4 infant ratio under 2 years, or does it operate under a religious or part-day exemption? Many full-day church-housed programs are fully licensed; many half-day preschool programs operate under religious exemption with looser staff-credential and inspection rules. Second, how is the religious content integrated? At one end is light seasonal observance (Christmas, Easter, Hanukkah programming); at the other is consistent daily liturgy, prayer, scripture, and devotional instruction. Our church daycare guide covers the model in depth.
Tuition at church-housed programs runs 10 to 25 percent below comparable secular centers in San Diego because the congregation typically subsidizes facility costs and may subsidize staff salaries. The trade-off is that hours and the calendar often align with the school year rather than year-round operation. For the deeper background on the model, our church daycare guide walks through what to ask on a tour and how to evaluate the religious-content fit.
The 2026 ranges below combine the federal price database, state market surveys, and operator submissions to DaycareSquare. Ranges, not single figures; any specific tuition is set by the individual program. Updated May 2026.
| Setting | Monthly range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Church-housed full-day center (infant) | $1,600 to $2,300/mo | Subsidized facility costs |
| Church-housed full-day center (preschool) | $1,300 to $1,800/mo | Below secular peers |
| Parochial school early childhood (pre-K) | $1,400 to $1,900/mo | Feeds elementary track |
| Half-day church preschool | $900 to $1,200/mo | School-year, 3 to 4 days a week |
These ranges reflect the US Department of Labor National Database of Childcare Prices (2023 release) uplifted to 2026 dollars and combined with operator submissions. For a deeper view of the San Diego cost landscape across all program types, see our San Diego daycare cost guide and our average daycare cost 2026 analysis. To estimate net out-of-pocket after credits and any subsidy, the cost calculator handles California specifically.
Subsidy paths in San Diego run through California Alternative Payment Program (APP) and CalWORKs Stage 1/2/3 vouchers, administered locally by YMCA Childcare Resource Service for San Diego County. Eligibility is typically capped at 85 percent of state median income (effective July 2024 expansion), with family-share copayments scaled to income. Our child care subsidy by state guide covers the application across all 50 states.
Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral Preschool is one of the longer-running church-housed early-childhood programs in central San Diego. Episcopal in identity, with moderate religious content. Tuition is in the upper-middle range for the metro. A natural fit for Bankers Hill and Hillcrest families.
Saint Joseph's Cathedral is the seat of the Diocese of San Diego and operates a pre-K through the parish school. Religious content is consistent and Catholic in character. Tuition runs below private secular preschools downtown. A meaningful option for downtown working Catholic families.
La Jolla Presbyterian Church Day School operates as a CCLD-licensed full-day program inside the La Jolla Presbyterian Church complex. Religious content is light and largely seasonal. Tuition runs at the upper end of the metro range. A useful fit for La Jolla and UTC families.
Saint Andrews Lutheran operates a Lutheran (ELCA) early-childhood program inside its University City campus. Religious content is mainline Protestant in style. Tuition is competitive with University City secular peers. A practical fit for UC San Diego-affiliated families.
All Souls Episcopal Church Preschool operates a CCLD-licensed program in Point Loma. Religious content is moderate and Episcopal in tradition. Tuition runs in the middle of the metro range. A natural fit for Point Loma and Liberty Station families.
Tifereth Israel Synagogue's early-childhood program is one of the most established Jewish-affiliated full-day programs in the San Diego metro. Conservative Jewish in tradition. Jewish content (Shabbat, holidays, Hebrew language) is woven through the curriculum without dominating it. Tuition is at the upper end of the metro range.
Saint James by-the-Sea is one of the historic Episcopal congregations in La Jolla and operates a half-day Episcopal preschool. Religious content is moderate; the program operates on a school-year calendar. Tuition is competitive with secular La Jolla half-day peers.
Solana Beach Presbyterian operates a CCLD-licensed full-day preschool in Solana Beach. Religious content is mainline Protestant and light. Tuition runs at the upper end of the North County range. A practical fit for Solana Beach and Del Mar families.
Soille San Diego Hebrew Day School's early-childhood program feeds the elementary day school. Modern Orthodox Jewish in tradition. Jewish content is consistent and Orthodox in character (Hebrew language, kosher kitchen, observant calendar). Tuition is at the upper end of the metro range. Our church daycare guide covers how to evaluate the religious-content fit at this level of observance.
The markers of a strong program are observable on tour. Use the same questions at every program so you can compare answers, not impressions. For the broader tour framework, our daycare tour questions guide is the parent's checklist; the items below are church daycare-specific.
For the wider city overview, our best daycares in San Diego roundup covers all program types across the metro. The printable comparison checklist is what we recommend taking on each tour.
Usually no. Most church-housed daycares enroll non-member families and many enroll families of other faiths or no faith. A small number of programs prioritize congregation members in admission or pricing. Ask during the tour. Our church daycare guide covers the membership question in detail.
It ranges widely. Mainline Protestant church daycares tend to keep religious content light and seasonal. Catholic parochial schools and Orthodox Jewish day schools weave religious content (prayer, liturgy, scripture or Torah, holidays) through the day. Evangelical Protestant programs sit somewhere in between but vary by congregation.
Most full-day church-housed daycares in San Diego are licensed by the state under California Community Care Licensing Division (CCLD) under Title 22, Division 12, Chapter 1 (Child Care Centers) and Chapter 3 (Family Child Care Homes), with a 1:4 infant ratio under 2 years. Some half-day part-week programs operate under a religious or part-day exemption with looser inspection rules. Ask to see the license certificate or exemption letter.
The congregation usually subsidizes facility costs (rent, utilities, maintenance) and sometimes subsidizes staff salaries or fringe benefits. The savings flow through to tuition that runs 10 to 25 percent below comparable secular centers. The trade-off is often a school-year calendar rather than year-round operation.
Many families of different (or no) faith enroll happily in church-housed daycares, particularly mainline Protestant programs where religious content is light. The fit question is whether you are comfortable with the program's seasonal observances and values; touring during a holiday week is a useful sanity check.
Costs, neighborhoods, subsidies, and the full daycare picture across the metro.
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