Chelsea House Levin

About Chelsea House Levin
About Education & Care Service
Education & Care Services are mainstream early learning centres that offer full-day or part-day care with a structured curriculum, qualified teachers, and a focus on learning through play. They cater to families needing flexible childcare options and wanting a balanced approach that supports social, physical, and early academic development in a diverse environment.
What Is 20 Hours ECE funding?
20 Hours ECE is a government-funded initiative that helps reduce the cost of early childhood education for families with tamariki aged 3–5. Eligible children can receive up to 20 hours of funded care and education each week at participating services. Centres can set their own enrolment patterns and may ask for optional charges, but the funded hours themselves should be free of compulsory fees. If you are unsure how this works at Chelsea House Levin, it is best to ask the centre directly how they apply 20 Hours ECE.
Community Profile
Roll & age distribution
Chelsea House Levin currently has a roll of 72 children tamariki , with most children enrolled in the 0–5 years age band.
Ethnicity profile
European tamariki are the largest group (49% of the roll), alongside māori, pacific, asian, other children.
Roll and demographic figures are based on data supplied by the Ministry of Education and were last updated on 01/07/2024.
Parent Reviews
“Safe and educated space for your children. Amazing qualified staff, three separate class rooms and a warm homely feeling atmosphere. I have seen first hand the great lengths this facility helps not only the child but the family unit to strive together. Highly recommended!”
“Our little man loves Chelsea house. Great teachers, great activities and he has grown so much attending this daycare.”
“Great time for me and for my son, caring and supportive team and manager. Thank you”
“When we put our children in daycare we presume that they are going to be safe and looked after, but unfortunately this didn't happen in our case. Since October 2018 our son has been beaten up by other kids. We contacted the daycare, and they said that they had a strategy in place to avoid him being hurt again, but this didn't happen. Just this month we received four/five incident reports, and the latest one was the worst by far. He was beaten up by a girl, causing him to have five cuts on his right cheek making the whole side of his face swell (see pictures). This happened in the morning and we were only notified in the afternoon a few minutes before he was dropped off at home. Later on in the day he started having a fever, and we took him to the afterhours where he was prescribed antibiotics. No-one from the daycare contacted us to follow up, or to check in to make sure that he was OK. We tried to contact the person in charge, but there seemed that there was no one available. I was trying not to write a bad review, but they don't seem to care about his well being, and this is just really upsetting.”
Interested?
Contact the centre directly to check for availability or arrange a visit.
Getting ready for daycare?
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