What information should a preschool admission form collect?+
A preschool admission form should capture the child's full name, date of birth, age in completed months, gender, and home address. Add a parent or guardian section with names, occupations, working hours, mobile numbers, email, and home language. Include a health section covering vaccination record reference, paediatrician contact, known allergies, dietary restrictions, current medications, and toilet-training status. Add a daily-care section for nap schedule, preferred half-day or full-day attendance, snack or meal preferences, and any sensory comfort items. Finally, capture pickup authorisation (named adults with phone numbers and ID reference) and at least two emergency contacts ranked by priority. Close the form with a parent declaration and signature line.
Do I need a medical history field on a preschool admission form?+
Yes. A medical history section is essential for preschool, kindergarten, montessori, and daycare admission forms because staff need to respond correctly to allergic reactions, asthma flare-ups, seizures, or chronic conditions during the day. At minimum, collect a vaccination record reference (immunisation card number or upload), known allergies (food, environmental, insect, medication), dietary restrictions, current medications and dosage timings, and any condition requiring an action plan such as an EpiPen, inhaler, or seizure protocol. Also capture the paediatrician's name and phone, the family doctor or hospital preference, blood group, and consent to administer first aid or paracetamol in an emergency. Many jurisdictions also require an immunisation declaration before the child can attend.
Can I add a pickup-authorisation section to the admission form?+
Yes. A pickup-authorisation section is one of the most important parts of a preschool admission form and you should add it as a dedicated section, not a single field. List three to five named adults the parents authorise to collect the child, each with relationship to the child (mother, father, grandparent, nanny, neighbour, sibling), mobile number, and a government-ID reference number. Add a password or code word that any authorised adult must state at pickup. Include a separate space for parents to list anyone who is explicitly not allowed to collect the child (useful in custody situations). The form builder lets you add each authorised adult as a repeating field group and mark the section as required.
What is a good age range to ask for in months instead of years?+
For preschool, kindergarten, and daycare, always ask for age in completed months in addition to date of birth. A child who is 2 years 2 months and a child who is 2 years 11 months are very different developmentally, and grouping them correctly into nursery, playgroup, pre-KG, junior KG, or senior KG depends on the exact month count. Most preschools use cut-off ages such as 18 months for daycare, 24 months for playgroup, 36 months for nursery, 48 months for junior KG, and 60 months for senior KG, all measured as of a fixed reference date such as 1 June. Capturing age in months on the admission form lets you place each child in the correct group automatically.
Should I collect parent working hours and occupation on the form?+
Yes, parent working hours and occupation are useful for several practical reasons. Working hours tell you whether a family is likely to need extended-day care, late pickup, or after-school programmes, which helps you plan staffing and pricing. Occupation can inform fee-assistance eligibility, sibling-discount validation, and parent-volunteer matching for events or excursions. It is also useful for emergency situations: if a parent works in shifts or is regularly unreachable during certain hours, the form should make this clear so staff know which contact to call first. Keep the fields optional rather than required, and add a privacy note explaining how the information will be used and stored.
How is a preschool admission form different from a school admission form?+
A preschool admission form focuses on developmental milestones, daily care, and safety, while a primary or secondary school form focuses on academic history and previous institution records. Preschool forms ask about toilet-training status, nap schedule, mother tongue, comfort items, eating and feeding habits, separation anxiety triggers, and crawling or walking milestones. Primary or secondary forms ask about previous school, board affiliation, transfer certificate, mark sheets, and language of instruction. Preschool forms also place much heavier weight on pickup authorisation, multiple emergency contacts, allergies, and the half-day versus full-day choice. Use this preschool-specific builder rather than a generic school form to make sure those critical fields are present from the start.
Is this preschool admission form template free and printable?+
Yes. The admission form builder is completely free, requires no signup or account, and generates a clean printable layout that you can save as PDF and hand to parents at an open day, send by email, or attach to your enrolment pack. Everything runs in your browser, no child or parent data is sent to a server or stored anywhere. Customise the fields for your preschool, nursery, KG, montessori, or daycare programme, preview the form live, and print or save as PDF when you are happy with the layout. For full digital admissions with online submission, document upload, automatic age-band placement, and parent communication, see the OpenEduCat admissions module.
Can I use this for a daycare or montessori centre instead of a preschool?+
Yes. The builder works equally well for nursery schools, kindergartens, montessori centres, daycare or creche programmes, faith-based preschools, and home-based early years setups. The fields you should prioritise vary slightly: daycare programmes need more detail on feeding schedule, diapering and toileting status, sleep routine, and bottle preferences; montessori centres often add questions about the child's preferred work areas, sensory sensitivities, and home practice; faith-based preschools may add a section on religious observances and dietary rules. Add or remove fields in the builder to match your programme, then save the printable PDF as your standard intake form for every new family enquiry.