Create an Evacuation Map for Your Daycare
Built for licensed childcare centers, preschools, in-home (family) daycares, after-school programs, and Head Start classrooms. Upload your floor plan and our AI drafts a posted-ready evacuation map — with primary and secondary routes from every room, nap-room and infant-area handling, an evacuation-crib note, an outdoor assembly/muster point, a severe-weather shelter area, extinguishers, pull stations, and first aid. Free, no credit card. It produces an OSHA-aligned draft; final local and licensing review may be required.
No credit card. Snap a photo of your room layout — that works too.
Need an evacuation map for your daycare?
Upload a floor plan, photo, or sketch and OSHAMap drafts a childcare evacuation map in under 60 seconds — classroom routes, exits, infant evacuation-crib note, and an outdoor muster point.
Built for childcare centers, preschools, in-home daycares, after-school programs & Head Start classrooms.
What a Daycare Evacuation Map Has to Show
A generic office or school map skips the things a childcare inspector and your licensor look for first.
Two Ways Out of Every Room
Each classroom, nap room, and infant room needs a clearly drawn primary route and a secondary route in case the first is blocked by smoke or fire.
- Primary egress per room
- Secondary / alternate egress
- Door swing + clear width
- Path to nearest exit
Nap Rooms & Sleeping Children
Nap time changes everything. The map shows the route from the nap room and your plan adds the wake-and-account step before staff leave.
- Nap-room route marked
- Wake / sweep reminder
- Mat & cot layout clear of doors
- Final-sweep responsibility
Infant & Crib Evacuation
Non-walkers cannot self-evacuate. Mark the evacuation crib or evacuation wagon and the door it rolls through to move several infants at once.
- Evacuation-crib location
- Buggy / rope route
- Door wide enough for the crib
- Diaper-bag / formula grab note
Outdoor Assembly / Muster Point
A defined outdoor meeting place away from the building and the fire lane, where staff count heads against the sign-in roster.
- Assembly point off the apron
- Roster / attendance grab
- Head-count + reconcile
- Backup location if blocked
Severe-Weather Shelter Area
Many states require a shelter-in-place location too. Use a distinct symbol for the interior shelter area versus the evacuation routes.
- Interior, lowest-level room
- Away from windows/glass
- Different color than exits
- Lockdown note if required
Extinguishers, Pull Stations & First Aid
Mark portable extinguishers, manual pull stations, the first-aid kit, and a YOU ARE HERE anchor plus the building/floor ID for responders.
- Extinguisher + pull station
- First-aid & AED (if present)
- YOU ARE HERE per room
- Building / floor identifier
Generate Your Daycare Evacuation Map Now
Snap a photo of your room layout or upload a PDF — get an OSHA-aligned draft in a few minutes, then have your director and fire marshal review it.
Childcare Compliance Cheat Sheet
State licensing, local fire code, NFPA 101 day-care occupancy, and federal OSHA all overlap. Requirements vary by state — confirm specifics with your licensing authority and fire marshal.
Federal OSHA 29 CFR 1910
- §1910.38 — Covered employers must have a written Emergency Action Plan with evacuation procedures and route assignments.
- §1910.36 — Exit route design: capacity, width, headroom, kept free of obstruction.
- §1910.37 — Exit routes maintained, lit, unlocked from the inside, and posted with EXIT signage.
- §1910.157 — Portable fire extinguishers where the employer expects staff to use them.
- §1910.151 — First-aid supplies available at the worksite.
- §1910.165 — Employee alarm system to alert staff of an emergency.
State Licensing · NFPA · Fire Code · ADA
- 📋State childcare licensing — Sets posted-plan content, drill frequency, ratios, and what is displayed in each room. Varies by state — verify locally.
- 🏫NFPA 101 Ch.16/17 — Day-Care Occupancy (generally more than 12 clients): egress, separation, alarms.
- 🏠NFPA 101 family day-care home — Provisions for small in-home programs in a residential setting.
- 🔥Local fire code (IFC / NFPA 1) — Locally adopted; the adopted edition and amendments control enforcement.
- 🌪️State emergency-plan rules — Many require a shelter-in-place location for severe weather and lockdown alongside the evacuation routes.
- ♿ADA 2010 §206/§404 — Accessible egress routes and doors for children and adults with disabilities.
What Our Generator Places Automatically for Daycares
Room-by-Room Exits
Each classroom, nap room, and infant room gets a primary and secondary route to the nearest exit, with EXIT pills numbered for the responding crew.
Evacuation-Crib Note
Infant rooms are flagged with the evacuation-crib or buggy location and the door wide enough to roll it through.
Outdoor Muster Point
The assembly point is snapped outside the building footprint and away from the fire lane, with a backup location.
Shelter-In-Place Area
The interior severe-weather shelter is drawn with a distinct symbol so staff never confuse "shelter here" with "exit this way".
Extinguishers & Pull Stations
Portable extinguishers, manual pull stations, and the alarm are placed and labeled for quick reference and inspection.
First Aid & Roster Grab
First-aid kit location plus a note for the sign-in roster a teacher carries out for the head count.
YOU ARE HERE + Floor ID
A YOU ARE HERE anchor in every room and the building/floor identifier so first responders orient instantly.
Ratio & Roll-Call Reminder
A training-layer reminder block for current licensed ratios and the wake-sweep-count steps your drills reinforce.
Common Daycare Inspection Findings
Cribs, cots, or cubbies blocking an exit door
Keep the egress path and door swing clear; re-check after every room rearrangement.
Posted plan does not match the current room layout
Re-generate and re-post the map whenever furniture, exits, or class assignments change.
No marked evacuation crib in the infant room
Non-walkers need a defined way out — mark the crib/buggy and its door.
Missing severe-weather shelter location
Many state rules require both an evacuation route and a shelter-in-place area — confirm and add it.
Drill log incomplete or not dated
Document each drill with date, time, who attended, and the head-count result; keep it with the map.
If This Sounds Like Your Program…
Six childcare settings, six different egress stories. Click any card to jump to the generator.
Center-Based Daycare
Multiple classrooms by age group, a shared nap area, infant room, kitchen, and a fenced playground. Each room gets two routes; the infant room gets an evacuation crib; the playground gate becomes a secondary muster path.
Preschool
Mostly mobile 3-5 year olds, a circle-time room, art and motor-skills areas, and restrooms. Routes emphasize the buddy/rope line, the outdoor assembly point, and a clearly different shelter-in-place symbol.
In-Home (Family) Daycare
A residential setting with a main play area, kitchen, and possibly a basement or upper floor. The map shows two ways out of each occupied area, smoke-alarm and extinguisher spots, and a meeting place a substitute can find.
After-School Program
Operates inside a host school, church, or rec center. The map references the host building's exits and assembly point and notes which routes the program is licensed to use after hours.
Faith-Based Childcare
Nursery and classrooms inside a larger worship facility. Coordinate with the building's master plan, mark the childcare-specific routes and crib evacuation, and align the muster point with the congregation plan.
Head Start
Federally funded early-childhood program with detailed emergency-preparedness expectations. The map supports the program's written plan with room routes, infant evacuation, shelter area, and a documented drill cadence.
Talk to a Childcare Safety Specialist
For multi-site childcare operators, franchise networks, or a Head Start grantee preparing for a licensing visit — our team can walk your portfolio with you.
Daycare Evacuation Map — FAQ
Is a posted evacuation map required for a licensed daycare?
It depends on your state and local code — there is no single national rule that applies to every childcare program. Most state childcare licensing regulations require a written emergency/evacuation plan and posted evacuation routes in each room, and your local fire code (often based on NFPA 101 Life Safety Code "Day-Care Occupancy" chapters or the IFC) typically requires posted floor plans and exit access. Separately, if your center employs staff, the federal OSHA Emergency Action Plan standard (29 CFR 1910.38) applies to the workplace. The bottom line: requirements vary by state, so confirm the exact posting and drill rules with your licensing authority and local fire marshal before relying on any template.
What standards and authorities actually govern daycare evacuation planning?
Four layers usually overlap. (1) State childcare licensing rules set drill frequency, plan content, and what must be posted in each classroom. (2) Local fire code — most jurisdictions adopt a version of the IFC or NFPA 1, with NFPA 101 "Day-Care Occupancy" provisions (Chapters 16/17) governing egress for facilities serving more than 12 clients, and "family day-care home" provisions for smaller in-home programs. (3) Federal OSHA 29 CFR 1910.38 requires a written Emergency Action Plan for covered employers, with 1910.36/1910.37 covering exit route design and maintenance. (4) ADA accessibility for accessible egress. Because adoption and amendments differ by jurisdiction, the locally adopted code and your licensing authority control enforcement — always verify locally.
How should an in-home (family) daycare handle the evacuation map?
Family day-care homes are treated differently from center-based programs under NFPA 101 and most state rules — they are usually a residential setting caring for a small number of children. Even so, most state licensing agencies still require a posted escape plan showing two ways out of each occupied area, smoke alarm and extinguisher locations, and an outdoor meeting place. Map the main floor and any basement or upper-level play area, mark the primary and secondary exit from each room, note the location of the evacuation crib or wagon used for infants/non-walkers, and post the plan where a substitute provider can find it. Confirm the specific in-home posting and drill requirements with your state licensor.
Do I need to show nap rooms and infant/crib areas differently?
Yes — sleeping and non-mobile children change the evacuation strategy. For nap rooms, the map should show the primary and secondary egress route and a reminder that staff wake and account for every child before leaving. For infant rooms, mark the location of the evacuation crib or evacuation wagon (a wheeled crib or multi-seat buggy used to move several non-walkers at once) and the door it exits through. The map is a planning tool: it supports your written plan and staff training, it does not replace the staff-to-child ratio checks and roll call that move children safely.
How do staff ratios and roll call fit into the map?
Ratios and attendance are a training layer that sits on top of the map. The map shows the route, the exits, the assembly point, and where the daily attendance sheet / sign-in roster is kept so a teacher can grab it on the way out. Your written plan and drills then assign who carries the roster, who counts heads at the muster point, and who performs a final room sweep (bathrooms, cubbies, nap mats, cribs). Post the current licensed ratios near the map as a reminder, and reconcile the head count at the assembly area against the sign-in sheet every drill.
What severe-weather or shelter-in-place information belongs on a daycare map?
Many states require both an evacuation route and a shelter-in-place location for tornado/severe weather, lockdown, or hazardous-material events. A daycare map can show the designated severe-weather shelter area (typically an interior room or hallway on the lowest level, away from windows and exterior doors) in addition to the fire evacuation routes. Use a clearly different symbol or color for "shelter here" versus "exit this way" so staff are not confused under stress. Confirm with your licensor whether a separate shelter diagram is required alongside the evacuation map.
How often do daycare evacuation drills have to happen, and does the map need updating?
Drill frequency is set by your state licensing rules and local fire code, and it varies widely — many programs run monthly fire drills plus periodic severe-weather and lockdown drills, but you must confirm your specific cadence with the licensing authority. Update the posted map whenever the room layout, furniture arrangement, exits, or class assignments change, and re-verify it before every licensing visit or fire inspection. Keep a dated revision so an inspector can see the map reflects the current floor plan.
How is a daycare map different from a K-12 school evacuation plan?
They overlap but are not the same. A K-12 school plan (see our school evacuation plan page) deals with large occupant loads, multiple wings, gymnasiums, cafeterias, and older students who can self-evacuate quickly. A daycare plan centers on very young, often non-mobile children: infants in cribs, toddlers who need to be carried or held in a rope/buggy, nap-time scenarios, and tighter staff-to-child ratios. Day-care occupancy provisions in NFPA 101 and state childcare licensing add requirements a general school plan may not address. Build the daycare map around your youngest, least-mobile children, not your most capable.
The Daycare Evacuation Map Playbook
From a single in-home program to a multi-room center, the egress story is dominated by one fact: your youngest children cannot save themselves. Build every decision around the infant room and the nap schedule, then confirm the details with your state licensor and fire marshal.
Start with your least-mobile child
Map the infant and toddler rooms first. If a route does not work for a teacher pushing an evacuation crib or leading a rope line of toddlers, it does not work. Everything else flexes around this constraint.
Draw two ways out of every room
Each occupied space needs a primary and a secondary route. The secondary matters most when the primary path fills with smoke or the nearest exit is the source of the fire. Mark both, distinctly.
Handle nap time explicitly
Sleeping children add a wake-and-account step. The map shows the route; your written plan and drills assign who wakes the room, who sweeps cots and cribs, and who confirms the room is empty.
Name the outdoor muster point
Pick a spot outside the building footprint and clear of the fire lane and parking apron. Add a backup location in case the primary is unusable. This is where the head count happens.
Add the shelter-in-place area
For tornado, severe weather, or lockdown, designate an interior room on the lowest level away from glass. Use a clearly different symbol so "shelter here" never reads as "exit this way".
Carry the roster, count heads
The sign-in roster is the source of truth for who is present. The map shows where it lives; your plan assigns who grabs it and reconciles the count at the assembly point.
Post it where staff and subs will see it
Post the current map in each room and where a substitute provider can find it. A plan a fill-in teacher cannot locate is a plan that fails on the worst day.
Drill, log, and update
Run drills at the cadence your state and fire code require, log each one with date and head-count result, and re-generate the map whenever the layout or class assignments change.
Standards Deep-Dive: Childcare
Infant & Non-Mobile Child Considerations
Infants and non-walking toddlers cannot evacuate themselves, so the map and plan must move them in groups. An evacuation crib (a wheeled crib rated to carry several infants) or an evacuation wagon/buggy lets one teacher move multiple children at once. Mark the crib's home location and verify the room's exit door is wide enough to roll it through. For toddlers who can walk but wander, a knotted evacuation rope or a "walking-rope" with handles keeps the group together to the muster point. The map shows the equipment location; your training makes it muscle memory.
Nap-Time and Roll-Call Logic
- The teacher carries the daily sign-in roster out of the room.
- One staff member wakes and gathers the children; another performs the final sweep of cots, cribs, cubbies, and the bathroom.
- At the muster point, head count is reconciled against the roster — by count, not by reading names aloud.
- If a child is unaccounted for, the designated lead notifies the fire department; staff do not re-enter.
- Post current licensed ratios near the map as a reminder, since ratio drives how many adults each route must support.
Severe Weather, Lockdown & Multi-Hazard Planning
Fire is only one scenario. Many state licensing rules expect childcare programs to plan for severe weather (tornado/hurricane), lockdown, and utility or hazardous-material events. A single posted map can carry an "evacuate this way" layer and a "shelter here" layer, as long as the two are visually distinct. The shelter area is typically an interior room or corridor on the lowest level, away from windows and exterior glass. Confirm with your licensor whether a separate severe-weather diagram is required in addition to the evacuation routes.
Glossary: Childcare Terms
- Day-Care Occupancy
- NFPA 101 occupancy classification for facilities serving more than 12 clients; subdivided into new and existing.
- Family Day-Care Home
- A small in-home childcare program treated as a residential setting under NFPA 101 and many state rules.
- Evacuation Crib
- A wheeled crib designed to move several infants at once during an evacuation.
- Evacuation Wagon / Buggy
- A multi-seat wagon or stroller used to move several non-walkers quickly.
- Walking Rope
- A knotted rope with handles that keeps a line of toddlers together en route to the muster point.
- Muster Point
- The designated outdoor assembly area where staff perform the head count.
- Shelter-In-Place
- An interior protected location used for severe weather, lockdown, or hazmat events rather than evacuation.
- Ratio
- The licensed staff-to-child ratio, which varies by age group and by state.
- AHJ
- Authority Having Jurisdiction — typically your state licensor and local fire marshal, who control enforcement.
- Roster Sweep
- The final room check (cots, cribs, cubbies, bathroom) confirming no child is left behind.
Multi-Site Childcare Operator Notes
Operators running several centers or a franchise network benefit from a consistent legend and layout across locations. Generating each site's map through one platform keeps the symbols, route colors, and revision-date stamp uniform, which makes licensing visits and fire inspections faster and reduces confusion for staff who float between sites. Each location still posts its own site-specific map; the operator retains the master file and a record of which maps are current.
Daycare Drill & Readiness Casebook
Practical scripts and checklists you can adapt. Confirm drill frequency and required content with your state licensing authority and local fire marshal.
Fire Drill Script (10–12 minutes)
- T-0:00 Lead announces "This is a fire drill" and activates the alarm signal.
- T-0:30 Infant-room teacher loads the evacuation crib; toddler teacher forms the walking-rope line.
- T-1:00 Each room exits via the primary route; the roster goes with the lead teacher.
- T-2:00 Final sweep of cots, cribs, cubbies, and bathrooms; door is shut behind the last person.
- T-3:00 All groups arrive at the outdoor muster point.
- T-4:00 Head count reconciled against each room's sign-in roster.
- T-6:00 Director confirms "all clear" and the re-entry order.
- T-8:00 Log the drill: date, time, evacuation duration, head-count result, and any issues.
Severe-Weather (Shelter) Drill Script (8 minutes)
- T-0:00 Lead announces "Severe weather — move to the shelter area."
- T-0:30 Groups move along interior routes to the designated shelter room, away from windows.
- T-1:30 Infants are carried or moved in the crib/wagon to the shelter area.
- T-2:30 Children sit along interior walls; staff cover with the protect-and-cover posture as trained.
- T-3:30 Head count reconciled against rosters inside the shelter.
- T-5:00 All-clear announced; groups return to rooms.
- T-6:00 Log the drill with date, time, and head-count result.
Pre-Inspection Walkthrough Checklist
- Posted map in every room matches the current furniture and exit layout.
- Primary and secondary routes are clear and unobstructed.
- Evacuation crib/wagon is present, marked, and its door is wide enough.
- Outdoor muster point and backup are identified.
- Severe-weather shelter area is marked and distinct from exits.
- Extinguishers tagged/current; pull stations and alarm accessible.
- First-aid kit stocked and its location shown on the map.
- Drill log is complete, dated, and stored with the plan.
- Current licensed ratios posted near the map.
- Substitute-provider copy of the plan is accessible.
Staff Training Curriculum (one session)
- Map walkthrough — every room's primary and secondary routes.
- Alarm signals and what each one means (fire vs. severe weather vs. lockdown).
- Your assigned role: wake, gather, sweep, carry roster, or count.
- Infant/toddler evacuation — crib, wagon, and walking-rope handling.
- Outdoor muster point and the head-count reconciliation.
- Shelter-in-place posture and location.
- What to do if a child is unaccounted for (notify, do not re-enter).
- Re-entry only after the director's all-clear, and logging the drill.
In-Home Daycare Quick-Start
For a family day-care home, keep it simple and verifiable: sketch the main floor (and any basement/upper level used for care), mark two ways out of each occupied area, show the smoke-alarm and extinguisher locations and the outdoor meeting place, and note where infants are moved from. Post the plan where a substitute can find it and walk it with anyone who covers for you. Then confirm the exact in-home posting and drill requirements with your state licensor — small-program rules differ from center rules.
Create my daycare evacuation map — free
Upload a floor plan or sketch, book a free expert map review, or grab the free template pack. No credit card required. Produces an OSHA-aligned draft; final local and licensing review may be required.
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