Recruiting and Hiring

The big red flag that working parents look for in a job

A new study from national childcare provider KinderCare finds that one in three employers do not offer any childcare benefits—but 85% of parents surveyed describe those benefits as “essential.”



The disconnect between corporate rhetoric and the reality of working parents is widening. While many employers claim to value "family-friendly" environments, a new study from KinderCare and The Harris Poll reveals a significant gap in tangible support.

Despite 85% of parents viewing childcare benefits as "essential"—ranking them alongside healthcare and retirement—a third of employers offer no childcare support whatsoever.

The Value Gap: Priorities vs. Reality

For working parents, childcare isn't just a "perk"; it is a top-three priority. While healthcare (70%) and PTO (56%) lead the list, childcare follows closely behind. For 25% of low-income parents, it is actually the single most important benefit.

Even when benefits exist, communication is often poor:

  • 50%+ of employees find their current childcare benefits difficult to understand.

  • 71% say their employer rarely mentions support for parents.

  • 69% view a lack of parental support discussion during interviews as a major "red flag."

The Cost of Inaction: Retention and Productivity

The lack of support is driving a talent exodus. Parents are no longer willing to sacrifice their family’s stability for a rigid workplace.

GroupCareer Impact of Childcare Needs
All Parents60% would reduce hours or take a less demanding job.
Low-Income Parents80% have switched or would consider switching jobs.
Gen Z ParentsSignificantly more likely to change careers for childcare.

Furthermore, 66% of parents admit that unreliable childcare directly hurts their productivity, and 75% feel an implicit pressure to be "always available," even in flexible roles.

A Gendered Crisis

The burden remains disproportionately on women. While the post-pandemic era saw a brief recovery for working mothers, 2025 has seen a reversal of those gains due to rising costs, the loss of remote work, and cuts to federal childcare funding.

  • 212,000 women exited the workforce in the first half of 2025 alone.

  • The labor participation rate for mothers aged 25–44 dropped by 3 percentage points.

  • In December 2025, an analysis by the National Women’s Law Center found that 100% of the 81,000 workers who left the labor force were women.


Companies that fail to bridge this gap face a dual threat of high turnover and diminished productivity. Conversely, the incentive for investment is clear: 80% of parents report they would be more loyal to an employer that provides genuine childcare support. In a tightening labor market, childcare benefits are no longer a niche luxury—they are a competitive necessity.