Opening a licensed daycare in BC means finding a space that satisfies the Community Care and Assisted Living Act, passes a Ministry of Children licensing inspection, and meets your municipality's zoning for group childcare. Most spaces don't qualify. We find the ones that do.
A licensed daycare in BC isn't just a commercial tenancy — it's a regulated childcare facility. The space must satisfy municipal zoning for group childcare, pass a Ministry of Children and Family Development licensing inspection, meet CCFL indoor and outdoor space requirements per child, and comply with BC Building Code for occupancy classification.
Most commercial spaces fail one or more of these requirements — and the ones that do qualify are rarely advertised as daycare-ready. I've placed daycare operators across the Lower Mainland and built a licensing-specific verification checklist that catches the problems before you commit to a lease.
The Community Care and Assisted Living Act sets minimum space standards per child. These are the four numbers I check every space against before it reaches your shortlist.
Minimum indoor usable floor space required per child enrolled. Calculated on net usable area — corridors, bathrooms, and storage are excluded from the count.
Minimum fenced outdoor play space required per child. Must be directly accessible from the care space, safely fenced, and free from hazards. This is the #1 space disqualifier.
Maximum child-to-staff ratio for infants and toddlers. Space must support proper supervision sightlines and room configuration for these staff-to-child requirements.
Separate washrooms for children and staff required. Child-height fixtures preferred by MCFD. Diaper change area with handwashing required for infant care programs.
Full-day licensed childcare for 13+ children aged 30 months to school age. Requires the broadest space — large indoor program room, dedicated sleep space, commercial-adjacent kitchen access, compliant washrooms, and fenced outdoor play meeting CCFL minimums.
Part-day preschool programs and school-age after-care. Often housed in church halls, community centres, or standalone commercial units. May have different zoning pathways and reduced outdoor space requirements for school-age programs.
Licensed care for children under 36 months — the most regulated and highest-demand childcare category in BC. Requires lower staff ratios, diaper change infrastructure, crib sleep space, and child-safe room configurations. Waitlists across the Lower Mainland make this a strong business opportunity.
Municipal zoning confirmed to permit a licensed group childcare facility — including any conditional use permit requirements. Childcare is excluded from many commercial and residential zones.
Usable outdoor area measured and confirmed to meet 5.5 sq m per child CCFL minimum — fenced, safe, accessible from the care space, and acceptable to MCFD.
Net usable indoor floor space calculated against 3.7 sq m per child requirement — determines your licensed capacity and whether the space supports your planned enrollment.
Washroom count and layout reviewed for child-accessible fixtures, separate staff facilities, and diaper change infrastructure for infant programs.
Parent drop-off access, proximity to traffic hazards, and safe walking path from parking to entrance assessed — all part of the MCFD site inspection criteria.
Proximity to industrial uses, traffic volume, noise, and environmental hazards assessed — MCFD considers the broader site environment as part of the licensing process.
A significant number of daycare licence applications are delayed or denied after a lease is already signed — not because of the operator, but because the space can't meet MCFD requirements. These are the most common reasons:
The most important decision a daycare operator makes isn't their curriculum or staffing ratio — it's the space. The wrong building doesn't just delay your opening. It can make licensing impossible, regardless of how good your program is.
I've worked with daycare operators across the Lower Mainland and understand how MCFD evaluates a site. Every space I present has been reviewed against the full CCFL and MCFD checklist — not just square footage and zoning. You get a shortlist of spaces that can actually be licensed, not spaces that look suitable until an inspector says otherwise.
Submit your program type, planned enrollment, and location preference. I'll run a daycare-specific Zoning Verified™ search — checking every space against CCFL space requirements, group childcare zoning, outdoor play, and MCFD licensing criteria before you see it. Free, no obligation, 24–48 hours.
Kamran will run a full daycare-specific Zoning Verified™ search and deliver your shortlist within 24–48 hours.