How to Evaluate Childcare Software

If you run a medium sized childcare program, manual billing and invoicing often becomes the “hidden second job” of your week: updating spreadsheets, matching checks to families, sending reminders, and rebuilding the same reports each month. This page gives you a practical way to evaluate childcare software for billing and invoices—so you can compare options confidently and choose what fits your center’s workflow, staffing, and compliance needs.

Manual processes can work when enrollment is tiny and stable. But for a medium-sized center—where staffing changes, discounts, subsidies, and schedule shifts are common—manual billing creates avoidable risk: errors, missed revenue, slow follow-up, and family frustration.

The challenge for a medium childcare program: Manual billing does not scale with complexity

Common signs it is time to evaluate a system:

  • Too many handoffs: Tuition details live in one place, invoices in another, and payment tracking in a spreadsheet—so nothing feels fully “current.”
  • Inconsistent rules across classrooms and age groups: Different rates, schedules, and part-time plans increase the chance of incorrect invoices.
  • Awkward money conversations: Without clear, consistent statements and reminders, staff end up doing manual follow-up that strains relationships.
  • End-of-month reconciliation takes too long: Deposits, card payments, and credits are hard to match back to invoices quickly.
  • Reporting is painful: Pulling “who is past due,” “what was collected,” or “what is expected next week” takes too many steps.

Evaluation criteria: What to look for in a billing and invoicing system for your medium childcare program

Use the criteria below as a checklist when you demo tools, read proposals, or compare software.

1) Billing automation that matches real tuition rules

Look for the ability to set up and consistently apply rules such as:

  • Weekly, biweekly, or monthly billing cadences
  • Part-time schedules and rotating attendance patterns
  • Sibling discounts, registration fees, and late fees
  • Credits, adjustments, and one-time charges without messy workarounds

Questions to ask:

  • Can you create tuition plans that mirror how your center actually charges today?
  • Can you adjust a family’s plan mid-month without breaking reporting?

2) Invoicing that is accurate, branded, and easy for families

Strong invoicing should include:

  • Automatic invoice generation and delivery
  • Clear line items (what the charge is for, what period it covers)
  • A simple way for families to view statements and balances

Questions to ask:

  • Do families receive invoices and receipts automatically?
  • Can you resend or regenerate invoices without manual rework?

3) Payment collection options that improve on-time payments

To reduce follow-up, look for:

  • Online payments families can complete quickly
  • Support for common payment types (often ACH and cards)
  • Optional autopay and predictable reminders

Questions to ask:

  • What payment methods are supported, and what does it look like for families?
  • Are reminders automatic, configurable, and trackable?

4) Real-time visibility for directors and administrators

A medium childcare center program needs quick answers without digging:

  • Who is overdue today?
  • What is expected this week?
  • What was collected by classroom, program, or date range?

Questions to ask:

  • Is there a single dashboard for invoices, balances, and collections?
  • Can you filter by family, classroom, time period, or payment status?

5) Reporting and exports that make reconciliation faster

Even if your accounting stays elsewhere, your billing system should:

  • Provide clean exports
  • Reduce manual matching of invoices to deposits
  • Support audit-friendly recordkeeping

Questions to ask:

  • Can you export transaction and invoice data in formats your bookkeeper expects?
  • Can you quickly generate reports for budget reviews or month-end close?

6) Controls, permissions, and compliance-friendly records

Because multiple staff may touch billing workflows, look for:

  • Role-based permissions (who can edit rates, issue credits, view balances)
  • Clear histories of changes and transactions
  • Secure handling of family financial information

Questions to ask:

  • Can you limit what each staff role can see and do?
  • Is there an audit trail for adjustments and refunds?

7) Implementation and support (critical even if you are not using software today)

If you are currently not using billing software (or your team is not uniformly tech-savvy), prioritize:

  • Easy implementation with guided setup and clear migration steps
  • Responsive customer support and practical training for directors, admins, and classroom staff as needed

Questions to ask:

  • What does onboarding look like for a center your size?
  • How quickly can support help when billing questions come up during busy hours?

How brightwheel fits these criteria 

Brightwheel is an all-in-one childcare management platform that includes automated billing designed to simplify invoicing, collection, and oversight in one place—especially helpful when you are managing multiple classrooms and many tuition variations.

  • Brightwheel emphasizes automated billing to simplify financial processes and support timely payments.
  • Brightwheel reports impact such as administrators and staff saving an average of 20 hours each month, and 90% of preschools using brightwheel reporting more families pay on time.

When you evaluate brightwheel specifically, focus your demo on:

  • Whether your tuition plans (part-time schedules, discounts, fees, credits) can be set up cleanly
  • How invoices look from a family’s perspective
  • The reporting you need for reconciliation and budget reviews
  • Permission settings for directors and office staff

Decision guide: When an all-in-one billing system is worth it for a medium childcare program

An all-in-one system is usually a strong fit if you want to:

  • Reduce repetitive admin work tied to invoices, reminders, and tracking
  • Improve consistency across classrooms and programs
  • Give families a clearer, easier payment experience
  • Get to “who owes what” without spreadsheets or manual reconciliation

It may be less urgent if:

  • You have very simple, uniform tuition plans and very stable enrollment
  • Your current process is already fast, accurate, and not dependent on a single person

Practical demo checklist: What to test in 20 minutes

Bring 2–3 real scenarios and ask the vendor to show them end-to-end:

  • A family moving from full-time to part-time mid-month
  • A sibling discount plus a one-time registration or activity fee
  • A past-due balance with an automatic reminder and a payment receipt
  • A report you use monthly (collections, outstanding balances, revenue by time period)

See how brightwheel works in real life

If tracking billing and invoices manually instead of an all-in-one system is the main reason you are evaluating childcare software, the fastest way to decide is to see how brightwheel works in real life and confirm it matches your center’s billing rules and reporting needs. Schedule a personalized demo with a brightwheel specialist and have all of your tuition billing-related priorities addressed.

Optional resource: A free guide to help you compare vendors

If you want a broader checklist for evaluating platforms (beyond billing), you can download A Practical Guide for Selecting Childcare Management Software. It is a helpful supplement if you are building an internal comparison process, but a focused demo using your real billing scenarios is usually the quickest path to clarity.

Select the best childcare software that addresses your priorities

Your medium sized childcare program may have other priorities. Learn how to evaluate childcare software that suits your various needs with the following resources: