Invest in High-Quality Early Years Education
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Invest in High-Quality Early Years Education” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Inequality & fair shares — Helps
minor · moderate confidence
This policy explicitly targets disadvantaged children with extra hours and more funding, which should help narrow the gap between the poorest children and their peers. But real delivery risks — a workforce crisis and questions about how effectively small providers spend the money — could limit how much of the gain actually lands.
The evidence
- The policy gives disadvantaged 3- and 4-year-olds an extra five free hours a week and triples the Early Years Pupil Premium to £1,000 a year. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “giving disadvantaged children aged three and four an extra five free hours a week and tripling the Early Years Pupil Premium to £1,000 a year”
- Only 20% of families in the bottom third of earnings are eligible for the existing 30 hours for 3- and 4-year-olds. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “only 20% of families in the bottom third of the earnings distribution are eligible for the existing 30 hours for 3- and 4-year-olds”
- The disadvantage gap at the end of reception was 4.7 months in 2024, up 0.5 months since 2019. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “At the end of reception in 2024, the disadvantage gap was 4.7 months, an increase of 0.5 months since 2019”
- The EYPP was uplifted to £570 per child annually in April 2025, up from £388. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “increasing the annual funding rate per child from £388 (based on 68p per hour) to £570”
- A significant increase in the EYPP would give early years settings more resources for evidence-informed approaches and targeted interventions. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “A significant increase to £1,000 would provide early years settings with considerably more resources to invest in evidence-informed approaches, professional development, and targeted interventions”
- The EYPP is considered a powerful tool to close the attainment gap when strategically used. — local.gov.uk (government) — “Analysts like the EEF consider the EYPP a powerful tool to close the attainment gap, especially when strategically utilized”
- An additional five hours for disadvantaged children would further strain sector capacity and workforce. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “An additional five hours specifically for disadvantaged children would further strain the sector's capacity and workforce”
- The sector already faces a significant recruitment and retention crisis due to low pay and limited professional development. — thevoiceofearlychildhood.com (media) — “The sector faces a significant recruitment and retention crisis, largely attributed to low pay, long hours, and limited professional development”
- Smaller providers spend EYPP on immediate needs rather than long-term quality improvements or staff training. — local.gov.uk (government) — “Smaller providers and childminders, in particular, have been found to spend the funding on immediate needs (e.g., resources, food, trips) rather than long-term quality improvements or staff training, unlike school-based …”
Biggest unknown: Whether the early years sector has the workforce capacity and funding-use discipline to convert the additional hours and higher EYPP into genuine quality improvements for the most disadvantaged children.
Our reading: The core inequality question is whether this policy narrows the gap between the most disadvantaged children and their peers. On this, the evidence leans toward a modest improvement. The policy explicitly departs from the existing universal expansion, which the IFS and Sutton Trust have shown to be poorly targeted — the poorest families are largely excluded from the current 30-hour offer. By contrast, the extra five hours and tripled EYPP are directed specifically at disadvantaged 3- and 4-year-olds, making this a genuinely redistributive design. The EYPP, even at its current level, is recognised by the EEF as a meaningful lever for closing the attainment gap — and tripling it (from ~£570 to £1,000) provides meaningfully more resources per child. The attainment gap at end of reception has widened since 2019, so there is a real and growing gap for this policy to address. That said, two delivery risks constrain the magnitude. First, the early years sector is already under workforce and capacity strain; adding hours for a new cohort of disadvantaged children risks diluting quality rather than enhancing it unless accompanied by workforce investment beyond what is stated. Second, evidence on how smaller providers currently spend EYPP suggests it flows to immediate consumables rather than sustained quality improvements — the structural mechanism that most reliably closes attainment gaps. These risks make the improvement real but modest, and felt over the long term as the children affected move through school. The counterfactual is continued widening of the disadvantage gap in a sector where the poorest children are disproportionately excluded from existing entitlements. This policy moves the distribution of provision toward the bottom — which is the right direction for O14 — but delivery uncertainty prevents a higher magnitude rating.
Cost of living — Helps
minor · low confidence
Giving disadvantaged three- and four-year-olds an extra five free hours of childcare a week would cut childcare bills for some low-income families, boosting their disposable income. However, the existing free entitlement already excludes the poorest families, and sector capacity problems may limit how many families actually benefit.
The evidence
- The policy gives disadvantaged children aged three and four an extra five free hours a week, which would directly reduce childcare costs for eligible families. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “giving disadvantaged children aged three and four an extra five free hours a week”
- The existing 30-hours free childcare expansion already primarily benefits working families; the poorest third of families see almost no direct benefit. — bigissue.com (media) — “the "poorest third of families will see almost no direct benefit from the new entitlements."”
- Only 20% of families in the bottom third of the earnings distribution are eligible for the existing 30 hours for 3- and 4-year-olds. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “only 20% of families in the bottom third of the earnings distribution are eligible for the existing 30 hours for 3- and 4-year-olds”
- Sector capacity is already severely strained; an additional five hours for disadvantaged children would further strain providers facing recruitment and retention difficulties. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “An additional five hours specifically for disadvantaged children would further strain the sector's capacity and workforce”
- Providers already report insufficient funding rates, and cross-subsidise free hours through charges for extras or by reducing quality. — bigissue.com (media) — “funding is insufficient, leading to providers cross-subsidizing "free" hours through charges for extras (like meals and nappies) or reducing quality”
Biggest unknown: Whether providers can actually deliver the extra hours given the existing workforce and funding crisis, and whether the most disadvantaged families — many of whom are not in work — are even eligible to access them.
Our reading: The primary O2 mechanism is straightforward: extra free childcare hours reduce out-of-pocket childcare spending for eligible families, directly improving disposable income. For low-income households where childcare is a major cost, even five additional free hours per week can be meaningful. However, two significant limiting factors constrain the magnitude. First, the evidence shows the existing free entitlement system already bypasses the very poorest families — only 20% of the bottom earnings third access the existing 30-hour entitlement, and the IFS finds the poorest third see almost no benefit from current expansions. This policy targets 'disadvantaged' children, but whether eligibility criteria reach non-working poor households is not specified, raising doubts about whether the families with the greatest cost-of-living pressure actually benefit. Second, the sector is already under severe capacity strain: providers report insufficient funding rates, recruitment crises, and cross-subsidisation through extra charges. If providers cannot absorb additional hours without passing costs back to parents in other ways (meals charges, etc.), the headline 'free hours' benefit to families is eroded. On balance, there is a real but likely modest and uneven cost-of-living benefit — some disadvantaged families would see genuine savings on childcare bills within a parliament. But given the structural exclusion of the poorest non-working families from free-hours schemes and delivery risks, the effect at population scale is minor and uncertain.
Education & opportunity — Helps
moderate · moderate confidence
Giving disadvantaged three- and four-year-olds five extra free hours a week and tripling the Early Years Pupil Premium to £1,000 directly targets the children most at risk of falling behind — the attainment gap is real and growing, and this policy is squarely aimed at it. The main caveat is whether the sector has enough staff and funding stability to deliver genuinely high-quality provision.
The evidence
- The policy gives disadvantaged three- and four-year-olds an extra five free hours a week and triples the Early Years Pupil Premium to £1,000 a year. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “giving disadvantaged children aged three and four an extra five free hours a week and tripling the Early Years Pupil Premium to £1,000 a year”
- The disadvantage attainment gap at the end of reception in 2024 was 4.7 months — up 0.5 months since 2019. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “At the end of reception in 2024, the disadvantage gap was 4.7 months, an increase of 0.5 months since 2019”
- The EEF notes the learning gap is on average 4.6 months by the end of the Early Years Foundation Stage and tends to widen through primary and secondary school. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “this learning gap is, on average, 4.6 months by the end of the Early Years Foundation Stage and tends to widen through primary and secondary school”
- Only 20% of families in the bottom third of earnings are eligible for the existing 30 hours for three- and four-year-olds. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “only 20% of families in the bottom third of the earnings distribution are eligible for the existing 30 hours for 3- and 4-year-olds”
- The EYPP was uplifted in April 2025 to £570 per child per year — still well below £1,000. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the EYPP saw a significant uplift of over 45%, increasing the annual funding rate per child from £388 (based on 68p per hour) to £570”
- The sector already faces a recruitment and retention crisis attributed to low pay, long hours, and limited professional development. — thevoiceofearlychildhood.com (media) — “The sector faces a significant recruitment and retention crisis, largely attributed to low pay, long hours, and limited professional development”
- The wider childcare expansion already requires an estimated 35,000 to 40,000 additional staff by September 2025. — thevoiceofearlychildhood.com (media) — “already requires an estimated 35,000 to 40,000 additional staff by September 2025”
- A tripled EYPP of £1,000 would give settings considerably more resources for evidence-informed approaches and targeted interventions. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “A significant increase to £1,000 would provide early years settings with considerably more resources to invest in evidence-informed approaches, professional development, and targeted interventions”
- The EYPP is considered a powerful tool to close the attainment gap, especially when strategically utilised. — local.gov.uk (government) — “Analysts like the EEF consider the EYPP a powerful tool to close the attainment gap, especially when strategically utilized”
- Adding five extra hours for disadvantaged children would further strain sector capacity, particularly given existing workforce pressures. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “An additional five hours specifically for disadvantaged children would further strain the sector's capacity and workforce”
Biggest unknown: Whether the early years workforce and provider market can absorb additional hours for disadvantaged children without quality being diluted by the existing recruitment and capacity crisis.
Our reading: The attainment gap for disadvantaged children is measurably worsening — up 0.5 months since 2019 — and the existing free childcare expansion largely bypasses the poorest families. This policy directly corrects that exclusion: extra hours specifically for disadvantaged three- and four-year-olds plug the gap left by the working-family-focused entitlements, and a tripled EYPP of £1,000 (up from the current £570) gives providers meaningful additional resource to fund high-quality interactions and staff development, which the EEF identifies as the key mechanism for closing the gap. The direction is therefore clearly positive for O7. The magnitude is moderated to 'moderate' rather than 'major' for two reasons. First, there is an acute workforce and capacity crisis: the sector already needs 35,000–40,000 extra staff for the existing expansion, and providers routinely report that insufficient funding leads them to cut quality. Adding more hours into this constrained system risks diluting provision. Second, smaller providers tend to spend EYPP on immediate needs rather than long-term quality improvements, limiting impact unless accompanied by better monitoring. Both these risks are real and cited, but neither negates the direction — they constrain the ceiling of impact. On balance, a policy that targets the children most excluded from existing entitlements, with a meaningful funding uplift tied to a premium proven effective by the EEF, improves O7 at moderate magnitude over this parliament, with confidence moderated by delivery uncertainty.