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BC Child Care Licensing Requirements Explained

The four types of child care recognized in BC, when a licence is needed, and where Responsible Adult training fits in.

If you're exploring a career in childcare in British Columbia, you'll come across the term "licensing" quickly. Understanding how BC classifies child care — and where Responsible Adult training fits — makes it much easier to figure out what qualifications you actually need.

The four types of child care in BC

The Province of British Columbia recognizes four categories of child care:

  • Licensed child care
  • Registered licence-not-required care
  • Licence-not-required care
  • Care provided in the child's own home
  • Licensed child care facilities are monitored and regularly inspected by regional health authorities. They must meet specific requirements for health and safety, staffing qualifications, record-keeping, space and equipment, child-to-staff ratios, and programming.

    Where the Responsible Adult qualification fits

    Certain licensed settings — including school age group care and occasional child care — only require staff to qualify as a Responsible Adult, rather than a full Early Childhood Educator (ECE). To work in these roles, a person must be at least 19 years old, able to provide care and mature guidance to children, and have at least 20 hours of training covering child development, guidance, health and safety, or nutrition. An employer can request an exception from their local licensing officer to hire someone younger than 19 in certain cases. The 20-hour training itself has no minimum age.

    This is exactly what our Responsible Adult Course is built to cover — 25 hours of self-paced online training that meets these licensing requirements. Read more about the specific legislation behind this on our BC Child Care Licensing Act page.

    When a licence is required

    In BC, a community care facility licence is required whenever care is provided to three or more children who aren't related to the caregiver by blood or marriage. Below that threshold, care may fall under "licence-not-required," which is not monitored or inspected and doesn't require staff to meet health or safety standards.

    What licensed facilities must meet

    Licensed programs must meet requirements set out in the Child Care Licensing Regulation, covering staffing qualifications, child-to-staff ratios, health and safety standards, and physical space requirements. These rules are enforced by the Community Care Facility Licensing program at your regional health authority.

    Getting qualified

    For most people entering the field, the fastest path to a licensed childcare role is Responsible Adult training. It's a one-time certification — no renewals required — and qualifies you for school age group care, occasional child care, and short-term ECE assistant coverage in a licensed facility.

    For official details straight from the province, see the BC government's child care licensing guide.

    Ready to Get Certified?

    Meet BC's licensing requirements

    Complete your Responsible Adult Course online and receive your certificate upon successful completion. Study at your own pace and start immediately.

    Take the Course — $39
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    BC Child Care Licensing Act

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    Responsible Adult Certification Requirements

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