Fifty-eight percent of American parents have gone into debt through credit cards or loans because of child-related expenses — a figure that holds even among families who knew parenthood would be costly. That number, drawn from a survey of more than 1,000 U.S. parents and caregivers, is striking not because it reveals a group of unprepared people making poor decisions, but because it reveals something more structural: the way child-related costs are timed, distributed, and sustained makes debt almost a predictable outcome, even for households that tried to plan ahead.

Understanding why requires looking at the mechanism, not just the math.

Why Child-Related Debt Is Rarely One Big Bill

Most people picture financial crisis as a single event — a medical emergency, a job loss, a roof collapse. Child-related debt rarely works that way. It builds through accumulation: a series of expenses, each individually manageable, that arrive faster than income can absorb them.

Before a first child even comes home, families face a concentrated burst of one-time purchases. A crib, a car seat, a stroller, a baby monitor, a breast pump, a changing table. None of these are optional in any practical sense, and almost none of them arrive after a savings runway long enough to pay cash. They land in the weeks around birth, when parents are least able to comparison shop or delay, and they often go on a credit card with every intention of paying it off quickly. That intention is usually sincere. The follow-through is where reality intervenes.

Because what comes next is not a return to normal spending. It is a new, higher baseline.

The Recurring Costs That Keep the Balance Rising

According to Rocket Mortgage’s report on the cost of raising kids, food and household goods ranked as the top ongoing expense category, cited by 38% of parents surveyed. Childcare came in second at 29%. Together, these two categories capture the core of why the credit card balance from year one doesn’t get paid off in year two: the money that would retire that debt is already spoken for by expenses that recur every month without negotiation.

Childcare is the clearest example. Among the 54% of parents currently paying for childcare, nearly a third — 32% — spend between 20% and 29% of their household income on it. That is not a marginal line item. At that share of income, childcare alone crowds out debt repayment, retirement contributions, and emergency savings simultaneously. Families are not choosing to carry debt carelessly; they are making rational, constrained choices among expenses that all feel non-negotiable at once.

Food costs compound this. A family’s grocery bill does not stay flat as children grow — it rises with appetite, with school lunches, with the particular inefficiency of feeding small children who waste food and refuse meals. These increases are gradual enough to be invisible month to month and significant enough to matter by year’s end.

Then there are medical costs. Well-child visits are routine. Sick visits are not scheduled but are not rare either. Prescription co-pays, vision screenings, dental cleanings, and the occasional urgent care trip are the kind of spending that families absorb quietly into a budget that has no room for them. They do not appear on any anticipated expense list, and they arrive throughout the year without warning.

The result is a household that started year one with one-time purchase debt and ended it without being able to reduce that balance, because the ongoing costs consumed every dollar that might have gone toward it.

Why Paying It Down Is Harder Than It Looks

The debt does not age out. This is the part that surprises many parents.

Child-related debt accumulated in the first year of parenthood persists not because families lose track of it, but because the cost structure that created it does not change. Year two looks a lot like year one: childcare bills arrive, grocery spending stays elevated, pediatric appointments continue, and the occasional large purchase — a bigger car seat, a toddler bed, preschool enrollment fees — arrives to replace the infant gear the child has outgrown.

Twenty-four percent of parents surveyed reported that their monthly spending increased by $1,000 or more after having children. For a household earning the national median income, a $1,000 monthly increase represents a significant and sustained structural change to cash flow, not a temporary shock that resolves itself. Carrying debt in that environment is not a failure of discipline. It is the arithmetic of a household where costs rose faster than income and never came back down.

The stress data reflects this. Forty-six percent of parents report that child-related finances cause them stress always or usually — not occasionally, not in difficult months, but as a chronic condition. That kind of ongoing financial pressure has real effects on decision-making, health, and relationships, and it tends to persist as long as the underlying cost structure does.

What Carrying This Debt Does to Other Financial Goals

Debt carried for years has downstream consequences that reach well beyond the credit card balance itself.

Fifty percent of parents surveyed said they delayed or avoided having additional children because of financial concerns. That is not an abstract preference shift — it is a fertility decision driven by economics, made by people who in many cases wanted more children but could not construct a plausible path to affording them.

Housing goals shift under this pressure as well. Forty-three percent of parents report needing more space after having children, and 41% cite homeownership stability as a priority. But debt reduces credit accessibility and limits the savings available for a down payment, which means the families most in need of stable, adequately-sized housing are often the least positioned to secure it.

Education savings suffer similarly. Sixty-one percent of parents are currently saving for future education costs, which suggests strong intention — but saving for college while carrying child-related debt and paying for childcare means slower progress on all three fronts simultaneously.

Child-related debt is not a story about recklessness. It is a story about costs that are real, recurring, and relentless — and a financial system where the timing of those costs rarely lines up with a family’s ability to absorb them all at once.

References

Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (2025). Household Debt and Credit Report. https://www.newyorkfed.org/microeconomics/hhdc

Urban Institute. (2024). The Cost of Raising Children. https://www.urban.org