💸 Kansas · 2026

Cost of a baby in Kansas

A baby's first year in Kansas costs an estimated

$15,250

about $1,950 less than the national average.

Where the money goes

First-year estimate for Kansas, by category.

Childcare / daycare$9,550

Biggest line — full-time infant care, the most location-sensitive cost.

Gear & furniture$1,850

Crib, stroller, car seat, carrier, monitor — mostly one-time.

Feeding$1,400

Formula, bottles, or pumping supplies and breastfeeding gear.

Diapers & wipes$850

Roughly 2,500–3,000 diapers in year one.

Healthcare$1,050

Well-baby visits, vaccines, copays (excludes delivery).

Clothing$550

Babies outgrow ~7 sizes in the first year.

Estimated first-year total$15,250

How we estimate this

We start from a national first-year baseline (about $17,200) and scale it to Kansas using the state's cost-of-living index (US average = 100; Kansas87). Location-sensitive lines — childcare and healthcare — scale fully with the index; nationally-priced retail (gear, feeding, diapers, clothing) scales at half that rate. These are planning estimates, not quotes: they exclude one-time delivery/medical bills and lost income during parental leave. Your real total depends on childcare choice, feeding method, and how much gear is gifted.

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to have a baby in Kansas in the first year?

We estimate about $15,250 for a baby's first year in Kansas — about $1,950 less than the national average. The largest line is childcare at roughly $9,550/year for full-time infant care. This excludes one-time delivery costs and any lost income from parental leave.

Why is childcare the biggest baby expense in Kansas?

Full-time infant daycare is the single most expensive — and most location-dependent — recurring cost for new parents. In Kansas we estimate around $9,550/year. Families who use family care, a nanny share, or a stay-at-home parent will see a very different total.

How can I lower the cost of a baby in Kansas?

Build a registry so big-ticket gear is gifted, buy a convertible car seat and crib that grow with your child, accept hand-me-down clothes (babies outgrow 7 sizes year one), and compare childcare options early — waitlists fill fast and prices vary widely even within Kansas.

Are these Kansas baby cost figures exact?

No — they're transparent estimates. We start from a national first-year baseline and scale the location-sensitive lines (childcare, healthcare) by Kansas's cost-of-living index, and retail lines more gently. Use the interactive calculator to plug in your own numbers.

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