Families warn they could quit Hackney after nursery fee hikes

Anne’s son. Photograph: courtesy of Anne
Families in Hackney are considering leaving the borough over the rising cost of childcare, despite government plans to double free entitlements for working parents next month.
Several parents said the incoming offer of 30 hours of free childcare will not make nurseries more affordable after the council moved to hike charges and scrap subsidies from September.
Father-of-two Jack Cornforth’s eldest son attends a council-maintained children centre in London Fields.
He said the “almost doubling of fees” means he will have to take his son out so he can enrol his youngest son there in the autumn and arrange several weeks of childcare elsewhere.
“There was no way we could afford it,” he added.
Under the Town Hall’s new scheme, fees are set to rise by 7.5 per cent for households earning less than £55,000, who make up the majority of families receiving subsidised childcare at the council centres, known as Children and Family Hubs.
The remaining households will now have to pay the full cost of childcare at council-run settings.
According to the council, households in the next bracket with a total income between £55,000 and £70,000 accounted for nine per cent of those using its maintained centres.
The Town Hall added that most children in the borough get their funding entitlement at a private or independent setting or school.
‘It’s not just a regular fee increase’
However, parents have said the fee hikes have virtually wiped out the government’s expanded childcare offer for them, and they are now “reluctantly” moving to take their kids out of their “amazing” council-run nurseries.
This could mean losing several weeks of support each year, since not all settings offer the same amount of childcare.
Video: Feyzi Ismail says she will pull her daughter out of her childcare centre due to the fee increases
Single mother Feyzi Ismail said she was “furious” with the council.
“There is no way I can simply absorb the absolutely horrendous fee increase.”
Another single mum, Anne, said she didn’t want to pull her son out of Hackney’s centres, where he and other kids were “thriving”, but felt she had no choice but to consider it.
Meanwhile, Guillermo said the rising cost of rent and childcare meant he and his family were now planning their exit from Hackney altogether.
“They are trying to somehow pretend this isn’t a major policy change and it’s just a regular fee increase,” Ms Ismail added.
“It isn’t. I don’t know why they would want to wreck the one thing that’s brilliant about childcare in Hackney – the children’s centres.”
Who is entitled to free childcare hours?
Hackney Council has said its changes were designed to coincide with when the government rolls out its expanded free childcare for working families.
From 1 September, children aged between nine months and four years from households where either parent works at least 16 hours a week and on a salary below £100,000 will get an additional 15 hours care. This brings the total weekly entitlement to 30 hours.
However, critics say the council did not properly assess the impact of the changes.

Hackney nurseries campaign at the Town Hall, June 2025
The campaign group Protect Hackney Nurseries is urging the council to pause and rethink – while also submitting their own report into how the hikes will affect families.
But despite protest marches, public and private meetings with councillors and an e-petition addressed to Hackney mayor Caroline Woodley, the council has stuck to its guns.
While acknowledging the hikes had come at a “difficult time” for families amid rising living costs, the Town Hall said the changes were the “only way to protect residents in greatest need”.
Guillermo suspects the hikes were already dampening demand for council-run settings like The Ann Tayler Children’s Centre.
When trying to enrol his son last year, he said, staff encouraged him to apply elsewhere due to their having long waitlists.
“Now we’re getting leaflets telling us there are places available.”
Hackney Council said advertisements like this were not unusual and always went out during the summer as admissions are usually low in August and September.
Update: this article was amended at 2.50pm on 28 August 2025 following a request to remove certain names.

I think it would be useful if the article included a breakdown of the total cost of nursery fees for households in each band before and after the change. So, for instance, if my income is £30,000, how much will i pay for a week’s childcare in a hackney council run nursery before and after the change? Would i pay more? It’s really not clear from the article
Don’t leave, stay and fight, organise against the introduction of the means test by this Tory lite Council who are too busy feathering their own nest using Council resources to bother about the concerns of residents who they assume will always vote ‘Labour help us to show these wretched ‘politicians’ that they cannot keep taking us for granted.