Head Start and Early Head Start: Program Overview
Head Start and Early Head Start are federally funded programs that provide comprehensive early childhood education, health, nutrition, and family support services to low-income children and their families across the United States. Administered by the Office of Head Start within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the programs serve children from birth through age five — with Early Head Start covering the youngest end of that range. For families navigating the broader landscape of childcare options and programs, these two programs represent one of the most significant federal investments in early childhood development in American history.
Definition and scope
Head Start launched in 1965 as part of President Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty — a summer program that quickly became a year-round institution. The numbers today are substantial: according to the Office of Head Start (OHS), the programs served approximately 833,000 children in fiscal year 2022 through more than 1,600 local grantee agencies operating across all 50 states, Washington D.C., and U.S. territories.
The governing law is the Head Start Act (42 U.S.C. § 9801 et seq.), most recently reauthorized by the Improving Head Start for School Readiness Act of 2007 (Public Law 110-134). Program standards — covering everything from staff qualifications to health screenings — are codified at 45 CFR Part 1302 (Program Operations) and 45 CFR Part 1303 (Facilities).
Two distinct programs exist under the Head Start umbrella:
- Head Start serves children ages 3 to 5, with a concentration on school readiness, pre-literacy, social-emotional development, and family engagement.
- Early Head Start serves pregnant women, infants, and toddlers up to age 3. The inclusion of prenatal services is not incidental — the program treats healthy fetal development as the first chapter of early childhood education.
Income eligibility follows the federal poverty guidelines. At least 90% of enrolled children in each program must come from families at or below 100% of the federal poverty level, as set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Up to 35% of enrollment can be reserved for children with disabilities, and children in foster care are categorically eligible regardless of family income.
How it works
Local grantees — which can be community action agencies, school districts, tribal organizations, or nonprofit organizations — receive federal grants and operate programs according to the Head Start Program Performance Standards (45 CFR Parts 1301–1305). These standards are notably comprehensive: they specify staff-to-child ratios, classroom environment requirements, health and developmental screening timelines, and family partnership expectations.
The operational framework follows four core service domains:
- Education and child development — Each program must implement a research-based curriculum aligned with the Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF), which describes developmental progressions across five domains: Approaches to Learning, Social and Emotional Development, Language and Literacy, Cognition, and Perceptual, Motor, and Physical Development.
- Health services — Within 45 days of enrollment, children must receive a complete health screening including vision, hearing, dental, developmental, and behavioral assessments (45 CFR § 1302.44).
- Family and community engagement — Grantees must create individualized Family Partnership Agreements and conduct at least 2 home visits per program year for center-based programs.
- Program management and quality improvement — Annual self-assessments and triennial federal monitoring reviews are required, with "Designation Renewal System" reviews determining whether underperforming grantees keep their grants.
Staff qualification requirements have tightened significantly over time. Under current regulations, all Head Start lead teachers must hold at minimum an Associate degree in Early Childhood Education; by September 2023, 50% of lead teachers across grantees were required to hold a Bachelor's degree (45 CFR § 1302.91). The credential requirements connect directly to the broader conversation about childcare provider credentials and qualifications.
Common scenarios
Head Start programs appear in three primary delivery models, and the right model depends on community context, available facilities, and family needs:
- Center-based programs are the most common — children attend a classroom setting for a minimum of 3.5 hours per day (part-day) or 6 hours (full-day), typically 4 or 5 days per week.
- Home-based programs serve families primarily through weekly 90-minute home visits with a qualified Home Visitor, supplemented by at least 2 group socialization activities per month. This model often fits rural or frontier communities where center-based facilities are scarce.
- Family child care programs place children with trained, monitored family child care providers who operate from their homes — a hybrid approach that attempts to preserve the intimacy of home care while applying Head Start standards.
Early Head Start also partners formally with licensed child care providers through the Early Head Start–Child Care Partnerships grant program, allowing infants and toddlers to receive EHS services within existing child care settings. This model specifically targets communities identified as childcare deserts where center-based options are geographically inaccessible.
Decision boundaries
Head Start is not universally available to all low-income families — demand consistently exceeds funded slots. The program is subject to annual congressional appropriations, and funding determines enrollment capacity, not need. The Office of Head Start's Program Information Report (PIR) shows enrollment figures annually, but waitlists are managed locally and vary widely by grantee.
Families choosing between Head Start and other subsidized care should understand the key distinctions:
- Head Start is not a childcare subsidy program in the traditional voucher sense — it is a direct-service program with its own staff, standards, and curriculum. Enrollment means entering a specific grantee's program, not receiving funds to apply elsewhere.
- Hours of operation matter. Not all Head Start programs offer full-day, full-year service. Families with full-time working schedules may need to combine Head Start with supplemental care — a logistical and financial complexity worth mapping before enrollment.
- Eligibility priority within programs is set locally. Grantees may give priority to homeless children, children in foster care, or families with the lowest incomes when slots are limited.
- Special needs enrollment is explicitly supported. Children with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) under IDEA Part B are eligible, and grantees must coordinate with local education agencies. The 35% enrollment ceiling for children with disabilities means programs actively seek this population — it is not a tolerance but a mandate.
The regulatory context for childcare that governs Head Start is among the most detailed in the early childhood sector, which is simultaneously its greatest strength and its most significant administrative burden for grantees operating on constrained budgets.
References
- Office of Head Start (OHS), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
- Head Start Program Performance Standards — 45 CFR Parts 1301–1305 (eCFR)
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF)
- Head Start Program Information Report (PIR)
- Improving Head Start for School Readiness Act of 2007, Public Law 110-134
- HHS Poverty Guidelines — ASPE
- Head Start Act, 42 U.S.C. § 9801 et seq. (via govinfo.gov)