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Procare vs Playground: Which Is Better for Childcare Center Administration?

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

Procare is the established incumbent with deep billing history. Playground is the newer, cheaper alternative with transparent per-child pricing. Both have meaningful gaps: Procare's legacy UX and support problems frustrate directors who need fast answers, while Playground's smaller feature set leaves compliance-heavy programs without tools they need.

Feature Procare Playground PebbleDesk
Monthly cost (small center) ~$85/mo $2/student/mo $3/child/mo (min $99, cap $399) — subsidy compliance included
Subsidy automation Limited Limited Built-in
Ratio tracking Basic Basic Real-time alerts

Pricing comparison

Procare runs roughly $85/month as a base. That covers core functionality — family accounts, billing, check-in — but directors report needing add-on modules to get the full system. A check-in kiosk adds hardware costs. Parent communication and additional reporting modules add monthly fees. A fully-equipped Procare setup often lands between $150 and $250/month, not counting staff training time.

Playground charges $2 per enrolled child per month. A center with 30 children pays $60/month; 50 children pays $100/month. Pricing is published on their website, which matters for directors planning budgets without a sales call.

Both platforms support monthly billing, but Procare pushes toward annual agreements.

Features that matter

Procare’s billing depth and family account management are its strongest features. Years in the market mean the billing module handles edge cases newer platforms haven’t encountered — split billing between two families, subsidy co-pay tracking alongside private-pay tuition, sibling discounts. Centers with complicated billing structures find Procare’s flexibility worth the learning curve.

Playground’s strengths are setup speed, pricing transparency, and a cleaner interface. Most directors are functional within a day or two. The mobile interface works for teaching staff logging attendance and daily notes on the go. Per-child pricing scales predictably with enrollment.

Basic attendance tracking, digital sign-in/sign-out, invoicing, and parent communication work in both platforms for standard programs.

Where each falls short

Procare’s documented problems are support response times and UX. Hold times regularly run 45 minutes or more during business hours. The interface has a steep learning curve — directors with staff turnover find themselves onboarding new staff to a complicated system repeatedly. Procare has experienced platform downtime that disrupted daily operations. The software has a legacy desktop feel at odds with mobile-first workflows.

Playground’s problems are feature gaps and scale limits. The platform has around 4,000 programs. Staff scheduling is limited — centers with multiple rooms and complex coverage requirements need more than Playground offers. Advanced compliance reporting is not available. Programs that grow in enrollment or complexity may find Playground constraining within a year.

The compliance gap

Procare’s age is both a strength and a liability.

On the strength side: more billing history and more edge cases handled in family financial management. On the liability side: Procare was built before modern state electronic voucher systems. Its subsidy tools require manual workarounds to reconcile CCDF and DHS claims against current attendance records.

Playground has no subsidy reconciliation tools. The platform is built for private-pay programs and the compliance depth that licensed, subsidy-accepting centers need is not there.

Both platforms produce attendance records. Neither produces the audit-ready format state licensing officers expect. Directors running licensed programs — who need to show room-by-room ratios, sign-in/sign-out logs matching subsidy claims, and incident documentation — maintain paper backup systems regardless of which platform they use.

That parallel system is the compliance risk. When paper records and digital records diverge, licensing flags get issued.

Verdict

Procare fits established centers with complex billing structures that can absorb the learning curve and live with legacy UX. The feature depth in family account management is real.

Playground fits smaller programs, new centers, or directors switching from paper who want a clean start at a predictable per-child price.

Neither platform was built for the compliance workflow that licensed programs need daily: ratio tracking, audit-ready attendance reports, and subsidy reconciliation without a separate spreadsheet. PebbleDesk starts at $29/month and is built around that workflow from the ground up.

Procare vs Playground Feature Comparison

Key features for childcare center directors choosing between established and newer platforms

FeatureProcarePlaygroundPebbleDesk
Pricing~$85/mo with modules$2/student/moFrom $29/mo published
Subsidy billingBuilt-in (legacy UX)Not availableBuilt-in
InterfaceLegacy desktop-firstModern mobile-firstWeb-first, mobile-first
Learning curveSteepLowLow
Staff training timeDays to weeksHoursUnder an hour
Real-time ratio alertsNoNoYes
Audit-ready reportsManual reformattingBasic attendanceState-formatted
Support45min+ hold timesEmailEmail, 1 business day
ContractAnnual commonNoneMonth-to-month

PROS & CONS

Procare

Pros

  • Deepest subsidy billing history — CCDF workflows built over decades
  • Handles complex billing edge cases — split billing, co-pays, sibling discounts
  • Most state subsidy agencies are familiar with Procare output

Cons

  • Legacy desktop architecture — mobile is an afterthought
  • Support hold times of 45 minutes or more documented
  • High learning curve creates training burden with staff turnover

PROS & CONS

Playground

Pros

  • $2/student/month — most transparent pricing in the market
  • No contract, 14-day free trial
  • Modern mobile-first interface with low learning curve

Cons

  • No subsidy reconciliation tools
  • Limited staff scheduling for multi-room centers
  • Compliance reporting requires manual work

Q&A

Is Procare or Playground better for a center with 30 children?

At 30 children, Playground costs $60/month — straightforward per-child pricing. Procare runs around $85/month base, but add-on modules for check-in kiosks and parent communication can push the total to $150-$200/month. For a 30-child center focused on cost control, Playground is often cheaper. For a center with complex billing history and established Procare workflows, switching costs may outweigh the savings.

Q&A

Does Procare handle subsidy billing better than Playground?

Procare has more billing features overall, including tools for family account management and subsidy co-pay tracking. But Procare's subsidy tools were built around older state systems and don't automate modern electronic voucher reconciliation. Directors in both platforms still do significant manual work to reconcile CCDF and DHS claims.

Verdict

Neither Procare nor Playground was built for subsidy compliance. PebbleDesk fills that gap at $29-49/month with audit-ready reports, ratio tracking, and CCDF reconciliation built in from day one.

Is Procare or Playground better for a center with 30 children?
At 30 children, Playground costs $60/month — straightforward per-child pricing. Procare runs around $85/month base, but add-on modules for check-in kiosks and parent communication can push the total to $150-$200/month. For a 30-child center focused on cost control, Playground is often cheaper. For a center with complex billing history and established Procare workflows, switching costs may outweigh the savings.
Does Procare handle subsidy billing better than Playground?
Procare has more billing features overall, including tools for family account management and subsidy co-pay tracking. But Procare's subsidy tools were built around older state systems and don't automate modern electronic voucher reconciliation. Directors in both platforms still do significant manual work to reconcile CCDF and DHS claims.
How difficult is Procare to learn for new staff?
Procare has a steep learning curve. The interface was designed for desktop use and reflects years of accumulated features added without a full UX overhaul. New staff — particularly teaching staff logging attendance and observations — often struggle with Procare's navigation. Playground is reported as easier to learn, with a cleaner mobile-first interface.
What happens when Procare has downtime?
Procare has experienced outages that directors report as disruptive — particularly for check-in kiosks and billing. Support hold times during outages can run 45 minutes or longer. Playground is newer and has had its own stability issues, though on a smaller scale given its user base.

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