By KakiList Editorial Team·Updated April 2026·Editorial standards
Infant care centres in Singapore are heavily ECDA-regulated — staff ratios, training requirements, and facility standards are strict. Typical monthly fees S$1,300-3,800 before subsidies; Basic Subsidy for working mothers (S$600/month) and Additional Subsidy (up to S$540/month means-tested) reduce net cost substantially. Waitlists for popular centres can reach 12-18 months — early enrolment matters more than finding the 'best' centre last-minute. KakiList connects you with 140 verified Infant Care providers serving the Bedok area. Our listed providers maintain an average rating of 4.6★ based on Google reviews. Bedok is a mature estate with many older HDB blocks built in the 1970s-80s, meaning pipes and electrical systems may need more frequent maintenance. Whether you live near Bedok MRT or around Bedok Mall, Bedok Point, Bedok Reservoir, our providers serve all parts of Bedok. Compare providers, read verified Google reviews, and contact them directly via WhatsApp — no middleman fees or hidden charges.
In Bedok, infant care work typically involves 2-18 month infant care placements, waitlist guidance, and subsidy application support. Because the estate runs along Bedok MRT with Bedok Mall nearby, most providers here can cover same-day call-outs across the East zone without long commutes.
Average rating: ★★★★½ 4.6 across 3716 reviews
See all 140 Infant Care providers in Singapore →
Contact providers directly for pricing.
Prices are estimates and may vary based on scope, property type, and urgency. Get exact quotes by requesting free quotes.
For HDB properties in Bedok, rates track the islandwide average for infant care. The main cost variables are job complexity and urgency, not location — though providers based outside the East zone may add a small transport fee.
PCF Sparkletots anchor operators and popular partner operators (EtonHouse, MindChamps) often have 12-18 month waitlists in high-demand Bedok estates. Join waitlists during pregnancy. For lower-demand slots, 3-6 month waits are typical. Enrolment incentives (sibling priority, resident priority at condo centres) can shorten waitlists significantly.
Anchor operators gross S\$1,300-2,000/month, net S\$300-900 after Basic + Additional Subsidy for eligible families. Partner operators gross S\$1,800-2,800, net S\$800-1,800. Premium brands gross S\$2,500-3,800, same subsidy eligibility. KIFAS for lower-income families can reduce costs to near-zero. International curriculum centres typically not subsidy-eligible.
ECDA requires 1:5 for 2-18 months. Quality centres voluntarily maintain 1:3 or 1:4 for younger infants. Ask specifically about ratios during naptime and lunch (when many centres cut corners with shared coverage). Newborn groups (2-6 months) especially benefit from 1:3 ratios.
Visit unannounced during mealtime, naptime, and pickup (5-6pm). What you see then is typical daily life. Check SPARK certification status (SPARK Commendation or Certification indicates quality benchmarking beyond minimum licensing). Ask about staff turnover — centres with teachers changing every 3-6 months disrupt infant attachment.
Quality centres maintain individualised feeding logs (time, volume, reaction), nap logs, and diaper logs shared daily via app or paper. Photos during day. Centres that provide only "summary" monthly reports aren't tracking in the detail infants need. Daily communication is both quality signal and parent anxiety management.