TLDR
South Carolina has approximately 1,100 licensed childcare centers as of 2024, regulated by the Department of Social Services under R.114-500. Centers participating in the ABC Voucher program need per-child attendance records that satisfy DSS billing requirements and reflect the mixed-age ratio rule correctly.
South Carolina childcare licensing overview
South Carolina has approximately 1,100 licensed childcare establishments as of 2024, spread across Columbia, the Greenville-Spartanburg corridor, Charleston, and Myrtle Beach. The Department of Social Services licenses centers under Regulation R.114-500.
The detail that matters most in South Carolina is the mixed-age rule. One infant or toddler in the room can change the ratio requirement for every child in that group. That is a software problem as much as a staffing problem.
Staff-to-child ratios and what they mean for software
South Carolina steps through several age brackets, but the mixed-age rule is what makes the state harder to model in generic childcare software. If the platform only follows the room’s dominant age group, it can miss the stricter ratio the room should have followed.
Directors need software that logs why the room was governed by a specific ratio, not just the final headcount. That matters when DSS reviews the record later.
Subsidy billing through the ABC Voucher program and DSS
South Carolina’s ABC Voucher program is administered by DSS. Centers submit attendance records for voucher-enrolled children, and those records need to stay organized by the payment period DSS uses when it reviews the claim.
Directors choosing childcare software in South Carolina should verify that the platform supports the DSS billing cycle for ABC Voucher claims, since the documentation timing and reconciliation rules need to line up with the payment periods the state uses.
Seasonal enrollment patterns
South Carolina’s school calendar drives the usual summer dip and August recovery for school-age care. Coastal markets such as Myrtle Beach can also see heavier staff turnover during peak tourism months.
That makes staffing history and classroom records more valuable than a simple monthly attendance total. Directors may need to explain both a ratio decision and a voucher claim from the same date range.
What South Carolina directors should ask software vendors
Three questions are worth asking before you commit:
Does the software apply the mixed-age rule automatically when infants or toddlers are present?
Can it export attendance records compatible with DSS ABC Voucher billing requirements?
If DSS asks for older voucher or ratio records, how quickly can you retrieve them?
Software built for compliance, not just communication
South Carolina centers do not need another product that is great at parent messaging and vague on mixed-age compliance. They need a record they can trust when DSS asks what happened in a room and why the billing record looks the way it does.
That is where PebbleDesk fits.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau NAICS 624410: Child Day Care Services, 2024 County Business Patterns
Source: South Carolina Department of Social Services: Child Care Assistance Program documentation
| Age Group | Minimum Ratio | Max Group Size |
|---|---|---|
| Infants (6 weeks-12 months) | 1:5 | 10 |
| Toddlers (12-24 months) | 1:5 | 10 |
| 2-year-olds (24-30 months) | 1:6 | 12 |
| 2.5-3 year-olds | 1:8 | 16 |
| Preschool (3-4 years) | 1:10 | 20 |
| 4-5 year-olds | 1:13 | 26 |
| School-age (5 and up) | 1:18 | 30 |
Running a South Carolina childcare center?
Start your 1-month free trial. Credit card required. We email you 3 days before the trial ends.
Start 1-Month Free TrialLicensed Childcare Facilities — Top South Carolina Markets
| Metro Area | Facilities |
|---|---|
| Columbia | 260 |
| Greenville-Spartanburg | 220 |
| Charleston | 200 |
| Myrtle Beach | 90 |
| Total — SC | 1,100+ |
Licensing Requirements — South Carolina
South Carolina childcare centers are licensed by the Department of Social Services (DSS) Division of Child Care Services under Regulation R.114-500. Required staff-to-child ratios: infants (6 weeks-12 months) 1:5, toddlers (12-24 months) 1:5, 2-year-olds (24-30 months) 1:6, 2.5-3 year-olds 1:8, preschool (3-4 years) 1:10, school-age (4-5 years) 1:13, school-age (5 and up) 1:18. When infants or toddlers are in a mixed-age group, the infant or toddler ratio governs. Ratios must be maintained and documented throughout operating hours.
Enrollment Patterns — South Carolina
South Carolina centers see summer enrollment shifts driven by school calendars, with school-age children leaving licensed programs in May or June and returning in August or September. Coastal centers can also face summer staffing pressure from tourism employment. ABC Voucher billing records should stay organized by DSS payment period.
Ready to run your South Carolina childcare center on one screen?
1-month free trial. Credit card required. We email you 3 days before the trial ends.
Frequently asked