Switching daycares is often harder than starting daycare for the first time — because your toddler has already formed real attachments to their current caregivers. Here's how to make it work.
Why Midyear Transitions Are Harder
Children 12–36 months form genuine attachment bonds with consistent caregivers. A change disrupts:
- Established daily routines and environmental familiarity
- Relationships with caregivers and peer group
- Predictability that supports emotional regulation
Step-by-Step Transition Plan
- 2 weeks before start: Visit the new center together during a low-activity time. Let your child explore without pressure.
- 1 week before: Start talking about the new place positively. "You're going to your new school where [teacher name] is. She reads amazing books."
- First week: Shorter days if the center allows (3–4 hours). Stay for the first 20 minutes of day 1 only.
- Establish new goodbye ritual: Same sequence every day — this signals safety to the nervous system.
- Overlap if possible: If leaving a great center, ask if you can do one part-day at each for a week.
What to Tell Teachers at the New Center
Give the new lead teacher a written "all about me" sheet:
- Comfort items or phrases that help when upset
- Nap preferences and timing
- Food quirks or preferences
- Names of previous caregivers they were attached to (so new teachers can reference them warmly)
When Regression Is Normal
Expect 2–4 weeks of increased crying, clingy behavior, and possible sleep disruption. If intense distress continues beyond 6 weeks, talk to your pediatrician and evaluate the fit.
Browse licensed daycare centers near you to find your next placement.