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Nebraska Childcare Licensing Requirements

Staff-to-child ratios, licensing requirements, CCDBG subsidy documentation rules, and compliance resources for Nebraska childcare providers.

2024 CCDF rule update: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services tightened CCDBG attendance documentation requirements. Nebraska providers receiving subsidy payments must maintain verifiable attendance records. The January 2026 ACF proposed rule may restore state flexibility, but documentation requirements remain in effect during the comment period.
Nebraska Childcare Licensing — Compliance Quick Reference
Licensing agencyNebraska Department of Health and Human Services — Division of Public Health — Child Care Licensing
Regulatory codeNeb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq.
Infant ratio (center)1:4 (max group: 8)
Toddler ratio (center)1:6 (max group: —)
Preschool ratio (center)1:15 (max group: —)
Subsidy programChild Care Subsidy Program
CCDBG payment modelAttendance-based
Digital attendance requiredYes — attendance documentation required for subsidy compliance

Nebraska childcare center: Staff-to-child ratio requirements

Nebraska licensed childcare centers must maintain specific staff-to-child ratios at all times as required by Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services under Neb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq..

Age group Staff:child ratio Max group size Regulation
Infant (0–18 months) 1:4 8
NE DHHS Child Care Licensing Regulations
Toddler (18–36 months) 1:6
NE DHHS Child Care Licensing
Preschool (3–5 years) 1:15
NE DHHS Child Care Licensing

Source: Neb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq.. Always verify current ratios directly with NE DHHS before making staffing decisions.

Nebraska childcare licensing agency

All childcare programs in Nebraska must be licensed by Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services through the Division of Public Health — Child Care Licensing. The agency conducts pre-licensing inspections, issues licenses, and performs ongoing compliance monitoring.

AgencyNebraska Department of Health and Human Services
DivisionDivision of Public Health — Child Care Licensing
Websitehttps://dhhs.ne.gov/Pages/childcare.aspx
Regulatory codeNeb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq.
Last verifiedMarch 2026

What changed for Nebraska childcare providers in 2024–2026

2024
HHS CCDF final rule — attendance documentation tightened. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued a final rule requiring all states to tighten CCDBG attendance tracking. Nebraska providers receiving subsidy payments must maintain verifiable, date-stamped attendance records for each subsidized child.
Jan 2026
ACF proposed rule — state flexibility may be restored. The Administration for Children and Families published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that would allow states to choose between enrollment-based and attendance-based payment models. The rule was in the public comment period as of early 2026. Check acf.hhs.gov for the latest status.

Nebraska CCDBG / subsidy compliance requirements

Nebraska’s Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) subsidy program — Child Care Subsidy Program — is administered by NE Dept of Health & Human Services (DHHS). Providers accepting subsidy-funded children must meet attendance documentation requirements to receive reimbursement.

Program nameChild Care Subsidy Program
Administering agencyNE Dept of Health & Human Services (DHHS)
Payment modelAttendance-based — providers paid based on actual days attended
Digital attendance requiredYes — attendance documentation required for subsidy compliance
Absence policyVerify from NE DHHS — typically 10–15 absence days

Nebraska historically paid providers based on actual attendance. The 2024 CCDF rule required transition to enrollment-based payment; Nebraska requested a waiver. Jan 2026 ACF NPRM proposes restoring state flexibility. Digital attendance records remain essential for audit compliance under either model.

Brightwheel helps Nebraska providers stay compliant.

Digital attendance tracking, parent sign-in/sign-out, and subsidy billing — built for Nebraska childcare programs navigating the 2024 CCDF rule change.

Digital attendance logs Timestamped check-in/out records satisfy NE documentation requirements and create an audit-ready trail.
Subsidy billing Invoice Child Care Subsidy Program and private-pay families from one platform — no dual systems needed.
Parent sign-in/sign-out PIN-based parent check-in creates a verifiable attendance record for every drop-off and pickup.
See how brightwheel automates compliance for Nebraska providers →

Frequently asked questions: Nebraska childcare licensing

Does Nebraska require a license to operate a childcare center?
Yes — Nebraska requires all childcare centers serving children in a group setting to be licensed by Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (NE DHHS). Licensing ensures programs meet minimum standards for staff-to-child ratios, director qualifications, facility safety, and health requirements. Operating without a license is prohibited and may result in fines or closure.
What are the staff-to-child ratios for childcare centers in Nebraska?
Nebraska licensed childcare centers must maintain the following minimum ratios: infants (under 18 months): 1:4; toddlers (18–36 months): 1:6; preschool age (3–5 years): 1:15 These ratios are set under Neb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq.. Always verify current requirements with NE DHHS.
How does Nebraska handle CCDBG subsidy attendance documentation?
Nebraska’s subsidy program is administered through Child Care Subsidy Program under NE Dept of Health & Human Services (DHHS). Attendance-based — providers paid based on actual days attended. Nebraska historically paid providers based on actual attendance. The 2024 CCDF rule required transition to enrollment-based payment; Nebraska requested a waiver. Jan 2026 ACF NPRM proposes restoring state flexibility. Digital attendance records remain essential for audit compliance under either model.
What agency licenses childcare in Nebraska?
Childcare programs in Nebraska are licensed by Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services — Division of Public Health — Child Care Licensing. The regulatory framework is Neb. Admin. Code Title 391 (Child Care Programs); Neb. Rev. Stat. §71-1908 et seq.. Visit https://dhhs.ne.gov/Pages/childcare.aspx for official licensing applications, regulations, and contacts.
How long does it take to get a childcare license in Nebraska?
The timeline to obtain a childcare center license in Nebraska typically ranges from 2–6 months depending on application completeness, background check processing, and scheduling of the required pre-licensing inspection. Applicants should contact Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services early in the planning process. Programs may not operate until the license is issued.
Does the 2024 HHS rule change affect Nebraska childcare providers?
Yes — the 2024 CCDF final rule from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services tightened attendance documentation requirements for all states receiving CCDBG funding, including Nebraska. Nebraska providers receiving CCAP/subsidy payments must maintain accurate, verifiable attendance records. The January 2026 ACF proposed rule may restore some state flexibility, but documentation requirements remain in effect while the rule is under review.

County-specific childcare requirements in Nebraska

Childcare licensing in Nebraska is set at the state level — the same standards apply statewide. However, local requirements vary by county for zoning approvals, conditional use permits, fire safety inspections, health permits, and business licenses. Below are compliance guides for Nebraska’s 3 largest counties by population.

Sources & references

This page was compiled from official government sources. Always verify current requirements directly with Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services before making licensing or compliance decisions.

Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal or compliance advice. Childcare licensing requirements change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services at https://dhhs.ne.gov/Pages/childcare.aspx before making compliance decisions. Last verified: April 2026.