Federal, provincial and territorial ministers* most responsible for early learning and child care gathered today in Ottawa for their regularly scheduled meeting to advance shared priorities, marking this pivotal moment as governments move into the next phase of their agreements. The meeting was co-chaired by the Honourable Patty Hajdu, Canada's Minister of Jobs and Families and Minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario and the Honourable Tracy Schmidt, Manitoba's Minister of Education and Early Childhood Learning.
The ministers reviewed the progress achieved in all jurisdictions since 2021 to increase access and improve affordability of child care for families in Canada including initiatives under the initial set of Canada-wide agreements. Ministers also acknowledged the need to get this right for Canadian families, given the pressures facing families, providers and governments amid ongoing global economic disruption.
Under this Canada-wide system partnership, all jurisdictions made substantial progress to improve child care affordability by reducing fees by at least 50% resulting in families saving thousands per child, per year, varying by jurisdiction. Furthermore, access to affordable child care allows more parents, particularly mothers, to participate in the labour force and achieve greater economic security. Thanks in part to the Canada-wide system, the participation of mothers with young children in the labour force reached a near record high in 2025.
In 2025, all Canada-wide agreements were extended, reflecting governments' shared commitment to continue the work toward improving access to affordable and high-quality regulated child care beyond March 2026. As of January 2026, provinces and territories have reported the creation of nearly 155,000 new Canada-wide spaces while also announcing projects and investments to support the creation of nearly 210,000 new early learning and child care spaces**. Thanks to the combined efforts of provincial, territorial, and federal governments, approximately 900,000 children and their families across Canada are benefiting from affordable, high-quality child care.
Building on the agreement extensions signed in 2025, federal, provincial, and territorial governments recommitted to continue working in partnership to ensure the long-term sustainability of the Canada-wide early learning and child care system in the context of current economic realities and the distinct priorities of families and providers across provinces and territories.
As the system continues to mature, ministers noted that ensuring equity for the territories - including consideration of northern realities such as small populations, remoteness, and higher operating costs - will be an important element of building a resilient and sustainable Canada‑wide early learning and child care system.
Ministers discussed opportunities to continue to advance the principles of the Canada-wide agreements, and emphasized the importance of providing stability for families across Canada while governments work to ensure system resilience.
As the early learning and child care system matures, ministers also acknowledge their shared commitment to effective reporting and efficient administration. To help streamline reporting efforts and track collective progress on the Canada-wide system, while recognizing the diversity of systems in each jurisdiction, ministers agreed to continue to work to develop targeted, common concepts and definitions.
Today's discussions took place during the fourth meeting of the Federal, Provincial and Territorial Forum of Ministers Most Responsible for Early Learning and Child Care. Established in 2022, the Forum serves as a table for ministers most responsible for early learning and child care to share information and best practices, as well as discuss common priorities and areas of shared interest, such as supporting the child care workforce, high-quality care and better data reporting.
The ministers remain committed to working together to ensure sustainability of the Canada-wide system and support access to affordable, high-quality early learning and child care for families across the country.
* Nova Scotia's and Prince Edward Island's ministers were not in attendance; the respective Deputy Ministers participated in the meeting on their behalf.
* To preserve its exclusive jurisdiction over child care and to maintain sole responsibility for the planning, organization, delivery and rollout of early learning and child care services in the province, Quebec participates in the Forum as an observer only. Quebec is not bound by this news release, is not part of the Canada-wide early learning and child care system and is not involved in any of the associated work.
**Due to Quebec's asymmetrical agreement with the Government of Canada, Quebec is expected to provide Canada with public reports on its early childhood education system. Quebec publishes statistics on the development of its educational child care services network on its website (French only). In this dashboard, one of the figures indicates the number of subsidized spaces created since the launch of the Grand Chantier pour les familles, according to the data as of November 30, 2025 (French only).