Daycare in Cotswold.

Published ·Updated

Brick ranch and split-level homes on a tree-lined Cotswold street in Charlotte, NC, with a Cotswold Village shopping center sign visible at the corner

Cotswold sits between Myers Park and Matthews along Randolph Road, a postwar streetcar-suburb-style neighborhood organized around the Cotswold Village shopping center and the Randolph Road / Sharon Amity intersection. The neighborhood mixes long-time families with younger households drawn by Cotswold Elementary's school zoning and Charlotte Country Day School proximity. The daycare map leans private-center and church-based, with a handful of GS 110 home programs on the side streets. Charlotte families pay tuition in line with the broader Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia metro, and Cotswold sits squarely in the upper-middle band of the Charlotte price range. The daycare map here mixes private centers, church-basement preschools, and a moderate supply of GS 110-licensed family child care homes, with the NC Pre-K program and CMS Bright Beginnings Pre-K filling the four-year-old preschool tier for income-eligible families.

Sources used: the U.S. Department of Labor's National Database of Childcare Prices for Mecklenburg County; the North Carolina Division of Child Development and Early Education (DCDEE) on licensing under 10A NCAC 09, on the Star Rated License system, and on the North Carolina Subsidized Child Care Program; Smart Start of Mecklenburg County on NC Pre-K seats and the CMS Bright Beginnings Pre-K partnership; the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) State Preschool Yearbook for North Carolina; the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics for the Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia metro; and Child Care Aware of America.

What you'll actually pay

In 2026 dollars, full-time center-based daycare in Cotswold runs roughly $1,550 to $2,050 per month for infants and roughly $1,275 to $1,725 per month for preschool-age children, drawing on the National Database of Childcare Prices for Mecklenburg County and on DCDEE licensing data. GS 110-licensed family child care homes price lower, in the $900 to $1,275 per month range for infants, and nanny shares run $1,400 to $1,800 per child per month at prevailing Charlotte sitter rates.

The infant premium tracks North Carolina's licensing rule under 10A NCAC 09: ratios are 1 staff to 5 infants under twelve months in a small group, with square-footage requirements that limit how many infant slots a Cotswold center can carry. Cotswold tuition sits in the upper-middle band of the Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia metro, a gap that reflects commercial rent and the local mix of large- and small-footprint sites. A center with a dedicated infant room will typically price several hundred dollars above a church-basement program nearby offering only preschool.

Cotswold sub-areaInfant, centerPreschool, centerFamily child care
Cotswold Village / Randolph Road$1,650-$2,050 / month$1,375-$1,725 / month$1,050-$1,250 / month
Sharon Amity corridor$1,600-$2,000 / month$1,325-$1,675 / month$1,025-$1,225 / month
Cotswold Elementary core$1,600-$2,000 / month$1,325-$1,675 / month$1,025-$1,225 / month
Greenwich / Westchester$1,550-$1,950 / month$1,275-$1,625 / month$1,000-$1,200 / month

DCDEE licensing and the star rated license

Every Cotswold center and every family child care home is licensed by the North Carolina Division of Child Development and Early Education (DCDEE) under 10A NCAC 09. The regulation sets staff-to-child ratios, background checks, square-footage minimums, curriculum standards, and incident reporting. DCDEE issues a Star Rated License from 1 to 5 stars based on staff education, program standards, and compliance history. A Cotswold family touring centers should pull the licensing record and star rated license from the DCDEE public portal before signing a deposit. North Carolina also publishes early learning and development standards that participating providers align to.

NC Pre-K and Bright Beginnings

North Carolina runs two routes that Cotswold families with four-year-olds should both know. NC Pre-K is a state-funded preschool program for income-eligible four-year-olds, administered locally through Smart Start of Mecklenburg County. The program operates in community-based partner classrooms and inside several CMS Bright Beginnings Pre-K buildings. Eligibility runs through 127 percent of the federal poverty level for NC Pre-K with priority for families also experiencing other risk factors. The second route is Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Bright Beginnings Pre-K, the Charlotte school district's Pre-K seat and the privately funded Indy Preschool Scholarship, also targeted at four-year-olds whose families would benefit from a sliding-scale tuition. Applications for both run through Smart Start of Mecklenburg County in the same winter window before the fall start.

Heads up. Cotswold pickup windows fill the side streets every weekday between 5:30 and 6:00 pm. Most centers carry a late fee that starts at the published close time and doubles after a fifteen-minute grace. Build in a commute buffer from downtown Charlotte or the SouthPark corridor when you sign the parent handbook.

North Carolina Subsidized Child Care

Income-eligible families can apply for the North Carolina Subsidized Child Care Program, the state child care subsidy administered through Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services. The subsidy pays part of the cost at a participating DCDEE-licensed provider, with a family parent fee set on a sliding scale based on household income and family size. The subsidy can be used at a center or a GS 110-licensed family child care home with an open subsidized slot. North Carolina expanded reimbursement rates in 2024 to the 75th percentile of the regional market rate, narrowing the gap between what the subsidy pays and what private-pay families pay.

Federal credits and the North Carolina stack

Three federal tools stack on top of any NC Pre-K seat or North Carolina subsidy: the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit on IRS Form 2441, the Dependent Care FSA (up to $5,000 per household per year of pre-tax savings), and the federal Child Tax Credit. North Carolina adds a state Child and Dependent Care Credit at 7 to 13 percent of the federal credit, scaled by North Carolina adjusted gross income, plus a refundable state Child Tax Credit for income-eligible families. A two-earner Cotswold household paying the full private rate typically recovers $1,800 to $2,400 in combined federal tax savings on the $5,000 FSA alone, plus state credits.

Sample Cotswold centers

Cotswold Children's Center

Cotswold Village / Randolph Road · Infant through Pre-K · private

$1,850-$2,050 / month (infant)

Center in the Cotswold Village mixed-use district with infant, toddler, and Pre-K classrooms. NC Star 5-rated.

Randolph Road Montessori

Cotswold Village / Randolph Road · Toddler through Primary · AMS-affiliated

$1,750-$1,975 / month (toddler)

AMS-affiliated Montessori in a converted Randolph Road residence. Mixed-age 18 mo - 6 yr classrooms.

Sharon Amity Early Learning

Sharon Amity corridor · Infant through Pre-K · Reggio-influenced

$1,800-$2,025 / month (infant)

Reggio-influenced center along Sharon Amity Road. Atelier studio and shaded play yard.

Cotswold Methodist Preschool

Cotswold Elementary core · 2s, 3s, 4s · church partnership

$1,300-$1,500 / month (preschool)

Long-running nonprofit preschool inside Cotswold United Methodist Church. School-year calendar; NC Pre-K seats.

Greenwich Road Family Childcare

Greenwich / Westchester · Infant through Pre-K · GS 110 home

$1,000-$1,200 / month (infant)

GS 110-licensed family child care home in the Greenwich residential blocks. Accepts North Carolina subsidy.

Westchester Bilingual Early Years

Greenwich / Westchester · 3s, 4s · NC Pre-K / subsidy

Free NC Pre-K seats; sliding-scale via subsidy

Bilingual English-Spanish center holding NC Pre-K seats and accepting the North Carolina Subsidized Child Care Program.

Listings reflect editorial picks, not paid placements, and pricing is the published rate before any subsidized seat or federal and state tax credit. Verified by DaycareSquare editorial — last reviewed May 2026. Full Cotswold listings directory is in progress.

Frequently asked

Is the daycare market in Cotswold mostly centers or homes?

A balanced mix. Cotswold Village and the Randolph Road / Sharon Amity intersection concentrate the larger private centers, and the Greenwich and Westchester residential blocks hold a meaningful supply of GS 110-licensed family child care homes.

Are NC Pre-K seats available in Cotswold?

Yes. NC Pre-K seats sit at Cotswold Methodist Preschool, Westchester Bilingual Early Years, and partner sites in adjacent Eastover and Myers Park. Apply through Smart Start of Mecklenburg County.

How do I read the NC DCDEE licensing report?

Pull the report from the North Carolina Division of Child Development and Early Education (DCDEE) public portal before signing a deposit. Look for the most recent compliance visit, any open corrective actions, and the Star Rated License (1 through 5 stars).

Does Cotswold have CMS Pre-K classrooms?

Cotswold Elementary, which serves much of the neighborhood, hosts CMS Pre-K. CMS Pre-K applications run through the Bright Beginnings Pre-K program.

What is the realistic monthly cost after the FSA and federal credit?

A two-earner Cotswold household paying $1,950 per month for an infant slot typically nets out closer to $1,650 to $1,750 effective monthly cost after the $5,000 Dependent Care FSA, the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit, and the North Carolina state Child and Dependent Care Credit.

Where to go next

Walk through the cost calculator to model your Cotswold year with the FSA, the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit, and the North Carolina state credit factored in. Read our North Carolina Pre-K explainer, the Charlotte cost overview, the broader cost pillar, and our daycare comparison checklist before you book visits. For neighboring areas, see Eastover daycare and Myers Park daycare, or step back to all Charlotte.