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Head Start Program Facts: Fiscal Year 2018

Established in 1965, Head Start promotes school readiness for children in low-income families by offering educational, nutritional, health, social, and other services. Since its inception, Head Start has served more than 36 million children, birth to age 5, and their families. In 2018, Head Start was funded to serve nearly 1 million children and pregnant women in centers, family homes, and in family child care homes in urban, suburban, and rural communities throughout the nation.

For term definitions and fact sheets from other years, see Head Start Program Annual Fact Sheets.

Download the PDF version.

Federal Appropriations

The Congress of the United States authorizes the amount of federal spending for Head Start each year. The Head Start program is administered by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Federal grants are awarded directly to public agencies, private nonprofit and for-profit organizations, tribal governments, and school systems for operating Head Start programs in local communities.

Activity

Amount

Head Start Program, incl. Early Head Start-Child Care Partnerships

$9,472,946,340

Training and Technical Assistance

$235,385,242

Research, Demonstration, and Evaluation

$24,293,069

Monitoring Support

$41,994,027

Program Support

$39,324,335

Designation Renewal System (DRS) Transitions Support

$24,750,000

Total

$9,838,693,013

Annual Federal Funding and Funded Enrollment by State

The Head Start program serves children, families, and pregnant women in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and six territories. The table in this section presents the total actual funding awarded and funded enrollment of Head Start programs in each state and territory.

American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) funding is awarded to AIAN tribal governments. AIAN programs operate in 26 states, and in some cases their services cross state lines. Migrant and Seasonal Head Start (MSHS) funding and funded enrollment are shown as one total, as this program supports children and families who receive services in various states during the year. Thus, federal funding and funded enrollment for these services cannot simply be attributed to individual states.

Annual Federal Funding and Funded Enrollment
  Head Start (excl. AIAN) AIAN1
State/Territory Federal Funding Funded Enrollment Federal Funding Funded Enrollment

Alabama

$143,506,782

 15,255

   

 

Alaska

$16,990,529

 1,518

$27,315,052

 1,845

 

Arizona

$151,261,832

 13,423

$33,763,715

 3,229

 

Arkansas

$92,081,850

 9,967

 

 

 

California

$1,173,973,635

 91,231

$11,137,473

 801

 

Colorado

$103,819,522

 9,474

$2,560,527

 183

 

Connecticut

$66,995,105

 5,875

 

 

 

Delaware

$19,518,534

 2,147

 

 

 

District of Columbia

$31,913,607

 3,509

 

 

 

Florida

$376,991,324

 39,655

 

 

 

Georgia

$236,460,419

 24,363

 

 

 

Hawaii

$29,002,038

 2,959

 

 

 

Idaho

$31,755,165

 2,956

$3,932,729

 319

 

Illinois

$363,169,807

 34,904

 

 

 

Indiana

$138,388,507

 14,119

 

 

 

Iowa

$67,693,469

 7,202

 

 

 

Kansas

$71,953,412

 7,406

$1,716,680

 109

 

Kentucky

$156,020,771

 15,830

 

 

 

Louisiana

$188,036,102

 21,049

 

 

 

Maine

$37,487,962

 3,048

$833,119

 60

 

Maryland

$102,761,089

 9,541

 

 

 

Massachusetts

$143,821,413

 12,002

 

 

 

Michigan

$322,772,191

 30,232

$7,279,669

 598

 

Minnesota

$103,367,874

 11,202

$12,921,322

 1,009

 

Mississippi

$206,565,616

 23,640

$2,264,707

 268

 

Missouri

$167,211,107

 14,952

 

 

 

Montana

$32,050,444

 3,061

$17,561,378

 1,790

 

Nebraska

$50,953,745

 4,819

$4,521,426

 330

 

Nevada

$38,247,816

 2,954

$3,942,281

 362

 

New Hampshire

$18,834,273

 1,563

 

 

 

New Jersey

$171,816,866

 15,775

 

 

 

New Mexico

$69,904,056

 7,512

$26,568,426

 2,453

 

New York

$564,745,959

 50,288

$1,307,709

 143

 

North Carolina

$210,677,222

 21,309

$2,816,936

 230

 

North Dakota

$22,656,981

 1,964

$8,723,149

 840

 

Ohio

$341,431,136

 34,831

 

 

 

Oklahoma

$119,170,464

 14,313

$29,724,208

 3,041

 

Oregon

$89,625,254

 12,716

$4,252,927

 408

 

Pennsylvania

$314,025,088

 35,678

 

 

 

Rhode Island

$30,583,690

 2,696

 

 

 

South Carolina

$116,934,865

 12,604

$950,956

 80

 

South Dakota

$25,417,918

 2,759

$21,663,286

 1,949

 

Tennessee

$161,868,221

 17,197

 

 

 

Texas

$642,483,951

 72,053

$443,707

 34

 

Utah

$61,625,674

 5,671

$2,138,155

 236

 

Vermont

$19,665,325

 1,447

 

 

 

Virginia

$137,254,439

 14,230

 

 

 

Washington

$149,498,318

 11,985

$17,877,450

 1,451

 

West Virginia

$67,330,645

 7,937

 

 

 

Wisconsin

$130,869,509

 13,380

$11,419,519

 1,032

 

Wyoming

$18,038,075

 1,590

$2,854,858

 295

 

American Samoa

$3,778,245

 1,332

 

 

 

Guam

$3,075,810

 534

 

 

 

No. Marianas

$3,311,450

 460

 

 

 

Palau

$1,733,801

 350

 

 

 

Puerto Rico

$302,032,444

 32,223

 

 

 

Virgin Islands

$10,173,175

 1,014

 

 

 

Subtotal:

$8,473,334,521

 833,704

$260,491,364

 23,095

 

MSHS

$393,415,798

 30,326

 

 

 

Total
Funding $9,127,241,683
Enrollment 887,125

Program Year Statistics

Each year, Head Start programs are required to submit Program Information Reports (PIR) on the services they have provided to children and families throughout the program year, including child, family, and staff demographics and program characteristics.

For a copy of the PIR form, detailed reports, and data sets for the 2018 PIR and prior years, and for further information, please visit: Program Information Report (PIR)

Program Characteristics:

  • Twenty-nine percent of grantees operated Head Start preschool services only.
  • Twenty-seven percent of grantees operated Early Head Start (EHS) services only.
  • Forty-three percent of grantees operated both Head Start and Early Head Start services.

Most Head Start preschool services were provided in center-based settings that, based on local design, vary in the number of days per week and hours per day classes are in session. Over half of EHS services were provided in center-based settings, and less than half were offered in home-based program settings.

Pie chart displaying percentages enrolled in Head Start preschool program options

 

Pie chart displaying percentages enrolled in Early Head Start program options

Child and Family Demographics:

Head Start programs cumulatively served 1,050,000 children ages birth to 5 and pregnant women throughout the 2017–2018 program year.

Pie chart showing percentage of enrollment by ages 1 to 5 and pregnant women

Head Start served a diverse group of children, families, and pregnant women. Thirty-seven percent identified themselves as Hispanic/Latino, and 30 percent were Black/African-American.

Families were asked to self-identify both an ethnicity and a race category based on U.S. Census Bureau measures. For example, a family that identifies their child as Black and Cuban was counted in the "Black or African-American" race category for the race question and counted in the "Hispanic or Latino" category for the separate question on ethnicity.

Twenty-eight percent of participants were from families that primarily spoke a language other than English at home. Approximately 22 percent of participants were from families that primarily spoke Spanish at home.

Pie chart showing percentage of enrollment by racePie chart showing percentage of enrollment by race

Services to Children and Families:

Head Start programs work with families to help ensure children have access to needed services and resources. The number of children who received immunizations increased from the beginning of the program year to the end of the program year. Also, more families had health insurance and medical and dental homes for their children at the end of the 2017–18 program year than at the beginning.

Bar chart comparing change in four different health measures between beginning and end of enrollment

Head Start programs work with families to ensure they have the means to obtain health insurance, services for children with disabilities, adequate housing, job training, and more. In fiscal year 2018:

  • Most children had public health insurance. At the end of the program year, 90 percent of children were enrolled in Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), or a state-funded child health insurance program.
  • Thirteen percent of Head Start cumulative enrollment was made up of children with disabilities, defined as children having special plans under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). In comparison, nationally, about 3 percent of infants and toddlers and 6 percent of preschool-age children have identified disabilities. Head Start serves a greater percentage of children with disabilities than found in the overall population.
  • Among pregnant women enrolled in EHS, approximately 87 percent received prenatal education on fetal development and 22 percent had medically high risk pregnancies.
  • Head Start served about 956,000 families cumulatively throughout the program year. The number of families served is less than the number of participants served, since some families have more than one child enrolled.
  • Approximately 52,000 families served during the enrollment year experienced homelessness. Of those families, 32 percent found housing during the program year. Approximately 73,000 Head Start families received housing assistance, such as subsidies, utilities, and repairs.
  • Approximately 155,000 families, or 16 percent, received services related to job training and adult education, such as general equivalency diploma (GED) programs and college selection.

Program Staff:

Head Start programs employed and contracted with 265,000 staff. Parents of current or former Head Start children made up 22 percent of Head Start staff.

  • More than 1 million adults volunteered in their local Head Start program. Of these, 739,000 were parents of Head Start children.
  • About 127,000 staff members provided child development services to children, including teachers, assistant teachers, home visitors, and family child care providers.
  • Among child development staff, 29 percent were proficient in a language other than English.
  • Seventy-two percent of all Head Start center-based preschool teachers had a baccalaureate degree or higher in early childhood education, or in a related field with experience. The Head Start Act specifies that 50 percent of center-based preschool teachers nationwide should have had these credentials by 2013.
Bar chart showing percentage of center-based teachers' types of degrees

1AIAN funding is awarded to American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes. For reference, the funding and enrollment has been split out by the state in which the Tribe is headquartered. Some Tribes serve children across state lines.