Louisiana Daycare Staff-to-Child Ratios
Current staff-to-child ratio requirements for licensed childcare centers in Louisiana, as set by the Louisiana Department of Education. These ratios determine the minimum number of caregivers required for each age group and directly affect how many children your center can enroll.
Louisiana Staff-to-Child Ratio Table
| Age Group | Age Range | Staff : Children |
|---|---|---|
| Infant | Birth – 11 mo | 1:6 |
| Young Toddler | 12 – 23 mo | 1:8 |
| Two-Year-Old | 2 years | 1:12 |
| Preschool (3s) | 3 years | 1:14 |
| Pre-K (4s) | 4 years | 1:16 |
| School-Age | 5 years | 1:20 |
| School-Age | 6+ years | 1:25 |
Source: La. Admin. Code tit. 28, CLXI-1711 · Last verified March 2026 · Louisiana Department of Education
How Louisiana compares
Louisiana's infant ratio (1:6) is more lenient than the national median (1:4). More lenient ratios allow you to enroll more infants per caregiver, which can mean shorter waitlists and lower staffing costs — but also a higher workload per staff member.
What This Means in Practice
With Louisiana's 1:6 infant ratio, two infant teachers can care for up to 12 infants. Add a third teacher and your capacity jumps to 18. Louisiana does not set a separate group size limit for infants, so your capacity is determined entirely by your staffing.
This math applies to every age group. Before enrolling a new child, check both the ratio requirement and the group size limit (if any) for that age band. The more restrictive number is your actual capacity.
Mixed-Age Classrooms in Louisiana
Louisiana uses a weighted (proportional) method for mixed-age classrooms. Instead of applying one age group’s ratio to the whole room, the state calculates a blended ratio based on how many children fall into each age group. This can allow slightly higher total capacity than the youngest-child method, but the math must be documented for licensing.
Example: You have 3 toddlers and 7 preschoolers in one room. Louisiana calculates the required staff by dividing each sub-group by its respective ratio and summing the results. This typically allows slightly more children per room than the youngest-child method would.
What Louisiana Ratios Mean for Your Enrollment Pipeline
Ratios are the constraint that determines how many families you can pull off your waitlist. In Louisiana, the infant ratio (1:6) is typically the tightest bottleneck. With a more lenient infant ratio, your bottleneck may be in another age group. Look at where your waitlist is longest — that’s where capacity planning matters most.
When a child moves up from one classroom to the next, it creates openings that cascade through your entire center. Understanding your state's ratios at every age level helps you predict exactly how many seats each transition unlocks.
Seedlist Tracks Louisiana Ratios Automatically
Set your state to Louisiana in Seedlist and every enrollment decision is checked against your ratio limits. The system prevents over-enrollment, flags classrooms approaching capacity, and forecasts when transitions will open new spots. No mental math, no spreadsheet lookups, no compliance surprises.
Disclaimer: This information is compiled from publicly available state licensing regulations and was last verified in March 2026. Ratios and group sizes can change when states update their administrative codes. Always confirm current requirements with the Louisiana Department of Education before making staffing or enrollment decisions. Seedlist does not provide legal or regulatory advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the infant staff-to-child ratio in Louisiana?
Louisiana requires a 1:6 staff-to-child ratio for infants (Birth – 11 mo). This means one caregiver for every 6 infants. This is more lenient than the national median of 1:4.
Does Louisiana have maximum group sizes for daycare?
Louisiana does not specify maximum group sizes in its licensing regulations. Classroom size is governed by the staff-to-child ratio only — as long as you have enough staff, there is no cap on the number of children per room.
How does Louisiana handle mixed-age daycare classrooms?
Louisiana uses a weighted (proportional) method for mixed-age classrooms. Instead of applying one age group’s ratio to the whole room, the state calculates a blended ratio based on how many children fall into each age group. This can allow slightly higher total capacity than the youngest-child method, but the math must be documented for licensing.