Intake Forms for Childcare, Daycare, and After-School Programs: The Fields That Keep Kids Safe and Keep You Compliant
A parent signs in, hands you their child, and drives to work. For the next eight to ten hours, every medical decision, every safety judgment, and every emergency response depends on what you collected before that first drop-off. No other industry puts this much operational weight on an intake form. A plumber who skips a field on a service form may lose a sale. A childcare provider who skips a field on an enrollment form may lose a child’s life.
That is not hyperbole. Childcare intake is among the most regulated intake processes in any industry. State licensing boards mandate specific fields. Insurance carriers audit enrollment files. And in a custody dispute or medical emergency, your intake form is the document that determines whether your staff acted with the information they needed — or without it.
This guide covers every critical field across daycare centers, after-school programs, and summer camps — and explains why the split between an internal intake form and a parent-facing questionnaire is not just useful in childcare but essential.
The authorized pickup list: a safety-of-life field
Start here, because this is the field that generates the most licensing citations, the most parent complaints, and the most dangerous situations when it is missing or incomplete.
An authorized pickup list is not a contact list. It is a legal document that specifies, by name, every person who may leave your facility with this child. For each authorized individual, you need:
- Full legal name and relationship to the child — not “Grandma” but “Maria Rodriguez, maternal grandmother.”
- Phone number — so staff can call to verify if someone arrives who claims to be on the list but cannot produce ID.
- Photo ID requirement — your form should state explicitly that government-issued photo identification is required at every pickup for anyone other than the enrolling parent. No exceptions. No “but they know me” workarounds.
- Password or code word — many programs use a family-specific code word as a secondary verification, especially for situations where a parent sends someone not on the list due to an emergency.
Then there is the other side of the list — the unauthorized pickup section. This names individuals who are specifically prohibited from picking up the child. In nearly every case, this section exists because of a custody dispute, a restraining order, or a court-ordered restriction. It is not enough to note that someone is unauthorized. Your form must capture whether a court order exists, require a copy of that order in the file, and instruct staff on what to do if the unauthorized person appears — which, depending on the order, may mean calling law enforcement immediately, not just refusing release.
If your current enrollment form treats pickup authorization as a single blank line, you have a liability gap that no amount of staff training can close.
Emergency contacts: minimum three, ranked by proximity
Beyond the parents, you need at least three emergency contacts — and they need to be ranked. A retired grandmother who lives five minutes from the facility and can arrive in ten minutes is a fundamentally different resource than an uncle who works forty-five minutes away.
For each emergency contact, capture: full name, relationship, cell and work phone, home address, and whether they are authorized for pickup. Most states require a minimum of two non-parent emergency contacts; three is the operational standard because parents are often unreachable simultaneously (same workplace, same flight, same dead-zone area).
The ranking matters because your staff will work down the list in order during an emergency. A list that puts the most available, closest contact first saves minutes — and in an anaphylaxis or seizure situation, minutes are the margin.
Medical conditions and allergies: the section that saves lives
A child with a severe tree nut allergy goes into anaphylaxis during afternoon snack. The EpiPen is in the director’s office, but the lead teacher does not know the dosage, does not have signed authorization to administer it, and is not sure which child has the allergy because the file just says “nut allergy” without specifying severity. This scenario — or something close to it — happens in childcare facilities across the country every year.
Your medical section must capture, at minimum:
- Allergies with severity classification — not “peanut allergy” but “peanut allergy — anaphylaxis risk — EpiPen required.” Every allergy gets a severity level: mild (rash, hives), moderate (swelling, breathing difficulty), or severe (anaphylaxis). Each severe allergy requires a physician-signed action plan on file.
- EpiPen and emergency medication authorization — which staff members are trained to administer, where the device is stored, the dosage, the expiration date, and explicit signed authorization from both the parent and the prescribing physician.
- Chronic conditions with individualized care plans — asthma (inhaler location, known triggers, emergency protocol), diabetes (blood sugar monitoring schedule, insulin administration, hypoglycemia response), seizure disorders (recognition, response, when to call 911 versus when to monitor). Each condition is its own section with its own action plan — not a line in a general notes field.
- Immunization records — most states require current immunizations for childcare enrollment. Your form must track which vaccinations are current, which are pending, and whether the family has a medical or religious exemption on file. An expired immunization record discovered during a licensing audit can result in immediate enrollment suspension.
- Pediatrician and insurance — name, practice, phone number, health insurance carrier, policy number, and group number. Emergency rooms need insurance information immediately, and your staff need the pediatrician’s number for non-emergency medical questions that arise during care.
This level of medical documentation overlaps with what regulated industries require broadly — the difference is that your staff are not medical professionals, which makes clear, structured action plans even more critical than they would be in a clinical setting.
Medication administration: dosage, storage, and physician sign-off
Most states treat any medication administered during childcare hours — including over-the-counter products like sunscreen, diaper cream, and children’s acetaminophen — as requiring written authorization. Your intake form needs a dedicated medication section that captures:
- Medication name, dosage, and timing — “give as needed” is not an acceptable instruction. The form must specify the exact dose, the specific times or conditions for administration, and the route (oral, topical, inhaled).
- Physician authorization — for prescription medications, a prescriber’s signature or written order. For OTC medications, most licensing frameworks accept parental authorization alone, but the specific products must be listed individually. A blanket “you may administer OTC medications” consent does not satisfy most state requirements.
- Storage requirements — refrigeration needs, locked cabinet requirements, and whether the medication must remain in its original pharmacy-labeled container.
- Administration log — your intake form captures the authorization; your daily operations should include a medication administration log that records every dose given, the time, and the staff member who administered it.
Sunscreen deserves special attention. Most states classify it as an OTC medication requiring individual written consent. Your form should capture the parent’s preferred brand, whether the parent supplies their own, and authorization for staff to apply it before outdoor play. A facility that applies sunscreen without documented consent is, in many jurisdictions, administering medication without authorization.
Dietary restrictions and food allergies: beyond the checkbox
Food allergies and dietary restrictions in childcare require more granularity than a single field can provide. A child with a milk protein allergy who is served yogurt at snack time is not having a preference ignored — they are having a medical event.
- Food allergies with severity levels — distinguish between an intolerance (stomach discomfort) and a true allergy (anaphylaxis risk). Cross-contamination protocols differ dramatically between the two.
- Cross-contamination protocols — does the child need a completely separate preparation surface? A dedicated table at mealtimes? Staff hand-washing before handling their food? These operational details must be documented at enrollment, not improvised by kitchen staff.
- Alternative meal plans — if the facility provides meals, what substitutions are available? If the parent provides meals, what are the labeling and storage requirements?
- Religious and cultural dietary requirements — halal, kosher, vegetarian, vegan. These are non-negotiable for the family and must be treated with the same operational rigor as medical restrictions.
- Infant feeding — breast milk or formula, brand and preparation instructions, feeding schedule, bottle preferences, warming requirements, and who supplies the milk. Mislabeled breast milk or incorrectly prepared formula is both a health risk and a licensing violation.
Custody and legal documentation: when intake becomes a safety protocol
Custody arrangements affect childcare operations every single day — at pickup, during schedule changes, when one parent wants to modify the enrollment, and when a non-custodial parent arrives unannounced demanding to take the child.
Your intake form must capture:
- Custody type — sole, joint legal, joint physical, or other arrangement. Joint custody does not automatically mean both parents have equal pickup rights — the parenting plan may specify days.
- Court orders on file — a checkbox is not sufficient. The form must require a physical or digital copy of any custody order, restraining order, or order of protection in the child’s file. Staff cannot enforce an order they have not read.
- Restricted individuals — as covered in the pickup section, anyone named in a restraining order or custody restriction must be documented with the specific restriction and the staff response protocol if they appear.
- Communication protocols — in split-custody situations, who receives invoices, who gets daily reports, and who is the primary contact for non-emergency matters. Getting this wrong creates conflict that lands on your front desk staff.
This is one of the areas where handling sensitive information on intake forms matters most. Custody documents are among the most confidential records in any childcare file, and your storage and access protocols must reflect that.
Developmental information: what staff need to know on day one
Every child arrives at a different developmental stage, and assuming otherwise leads to frustrated children, confused staff, and unnecessary incident reports.
- Developmental milestones — walking, talking, self-feeding, utensil use. For infants: rolling, sitting, crawling, pulling to stand. A child who has just started climbing needs a different safety protocol than one who is not yet mobile.
- IEP or 504 plan status — if the child has an Individualized Education Program or a 504 plan, request a copy. Your facility may have legal obligations to provide accommodations, and staff need to understand therapy goals, triggers, and recommended strategies.
- Behavioral considerations — biting, hitting, separation anxiety, sensory sensitivities, difficulty with transitions. Frame these as information, not judgments. Staff who know that a child becomes overwhelmed by loud noises can proactively offer a quieter space during music time rather than reacting to a meltdown.
- Nap and sleep schedule — timing, duration, sleep cues, pacifier use, specific blanket or comfort item, whether the child needs rocking or prefers to self-soothe. Nap disruption is the single most common parent complaint during the first two weeks of enrollment.
- Comfort items — the specific stuffed animal, blanket, or object that helps the child self-regulate. A child with their comfort item transitions into care faster and with less distress. A child whose comfort item was left at home because nobody asked about it has a harder first week — and so does every staff member in the room.
- Primary home language — if the child’s primary language is not English, even basic words for comfort (“mama,” “water,” “potty,” “hurt”) in the home language make the transition dramatically easier for everyone.
After-school program specifics
After-school programs share most fields with daycare enrollment but add logistics that are unique to school-age children arriving from a separate institution:
- School name and grade — so staff know where the child is coming from and can follow up if the child does not arrive on the expected bus.
- Transportation arrangements — school bus, facility van, parent drop-off, or the child walks. If the child takes a bus, capture the bus number, expected arrival time, and the protocol when the bus is late or the child is not on it.
- Homework time — does the parent expect dedicated homework time? If so, how long and with what level of staff assistance? Setting this expectation at intake prevents the daily “did they finish their homework” conflict.
- Activity preferences — art, sports, STEM, free play. Programs that match children to preferred activities have higher retention and fewer behavioral issues.
- Pickup time flexibility — fixed time or a window? Late pickup fees and the threshold that triggers them should be documented at enrollment, not introduced after the first late arrival.
- Extracurricular coordination — if the child leaves the program early on certain days for sports, tutoring, or music lessons, who picks them up and at what time? This affects staffing ratios and attendance tracking.
Programs that coordinate with or refer families to outside tutoring services should note that tutoring and education intake looks fundamentally different from childcare enrollment — it centers on academic assessment, learning style capture, grade-level benchmarks, and IEP/504 accommodation documentation rather than the safety-of-life fields that dominate daycare and after-school forms.
After-school programs also inherit the universal intake fields that apply across every service industry — contact information, emergency contacts, medical conditions, and authorization signatures.
Summer camp intake: the seasonal layer
Summer camps add a seasonal set of fields that year-round programs do not typically need:
- Swim ability — non-swimmer, beginner, intermediate, advanced. This is not a preference question — it determines which pool group the child joins and whether they can participate in water activities without a one-on-one monitor.
- Sunscreen and bug spray authorization — as with daycare, these are OTC medications in most states. Capture brand, application frequency, and whether the parent supplies their own product.
- Field trip permission — blanket or per-trip? Many camps run weekly off-site excursions. Some parents consent to all trips; others want to approve each one. Establish this at enrollment so your permission-slip process matches the parent’s expectation.
- Overnight readiness — for camps with overnight components, capture the child’s experience with sleeping away from home, bedwetting history, nighttime fears, and any medications that are administered at bedtime.
- Activity restrictions — horseback riding, archery, ropes courses, water sports. Each high-risk activity should have its own opt-in or opt-out on the enrollment form, not a blanket “my child may participate in all camp activities.”
The parent questionnaire: why the split matters more in childcare than anywhere else
In most industries, splitting the intake form from the client questionnaire is a matter of operational efficiency. In childcare, it is a matter of document function.
The intake form is an internal operational document. It captures the safety, medical, legal, and logistical data that staff reference every day. It lives in the child’s file. Licensing inspectors review it. It does not contain signatures, acknowledgments, or parent-facing language because it is not a parent document — it is a staff document.
The questionnaire is the parent-facing document. It captures communication preferences, parenting philosophy, cultural and religious considerations, discipline approach alignment, and the authorizations that require a parent’s signature. It is where you document:
- Communication preferences — daily reports via app, weekly email summaries, or in-person updates at pickup. How the parent wants to receive information about their child’s day.
- Parenting philosophy — screen time limits, discipline approach, independence expectations, food philosophy. Not to judge, but to align care practices with home practices as closely as possible.
- Cultural and religious considerations — holidays observed, dietary practices, prayer or meditation routines, clothing requirements. A child who prays at a specific time needs staff who know that and accommodate it.
- Goals for the child — socialization, school readiness, language development, potty training support. Understanding what the parent is hoping to achieve helps staff prioritize activities and report on progress.
- Signed authorizations — photo and video consent, field trip permission, water play consent, discipline policy acknowledgment, handbook receipt, and medical treatment authorization. Every signature belongs on the questionnaire, not the intake form.
When both documents are in the file, you have complete coverage: the operational data staff need to keep the child safe, and the signed authorizations that prove the parent consented to your policies and procedures.
State licensing requirements: your intake supplements but does not replace
Every state has its own childcare licensing framework, and most mandate specific enrollment forms or require specific fields on enrollment documentation. Your intake form supplements these requirements — it does not replace them.
Common state-mandated fields include: proof of age (birth certificate or passport), immunization records or exemption documentation, a signed emergency medical authorization, and a completed health assessment from the child’s physician. Some states mandate a specific state-issued enrollment form that must be in every child’s file. Your intake form captures everything beyond the state minimum — the operational details, the custody documentation, the developmental profile, and the daily logistics that state forms do not cover.
A licensing inspector who opens a file and finds only the state-mandated form and nothing else will not cite you for missing paperwork — but your staff will not have the information they need to provide safe, individualized care. The state minimum is a floor, not a standard. For programs operating in emergency or extended-hours situations, the documentation requirements intensify further because the staff handling the child may not be the same staff who enrolled them.
Why childcare intake is worth getting right
A complete enrollment file protects the child by giving every staff member the medical, safety, and developmental information they need before the child walks through the door. It protects the parent by establishing clear expectations about cost, communication, and care practices. It protects the facility by documenting every authorization, every court order, every action plan, and every policy acknowledgment that a licensing inspector, an attorney, or an insurance adjuster might ask for.
The programs that get this right — that treat enrollment as a thorough, structured process rather than a clipboard with a few blanks — retain families for years, pass licensing inspections without findings, resolve parent disputes with documentation instead of memory, and respond to emergencies with confidence instead of confusion.
No intake form in any industry carries more operational weight per field than one in childcare. Every blank you leave empty is a question your staff will have to answer under pressure, without information, when a child’s safety depends on the answer.
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