RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Making Sense of Childcare Instability Among Families with Low Incomes: (Un)desired and (Un)planned Reasons for Changing Childcare Arrangements JF RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences FD Russell Sage Foundation SP 120 OP 142 DO 10.7758/RSF.2022.8.5.06 VO 8 IS 5 A1 Alejandra Ros Pilarz A1 Heather Sandstrom A1 Julia R. Henly YR 2022 UL http://www.rsfjournal.org/content/8/5/120.abstract AB Childcare instability can negatively affect family well-being. Yet not all childcare changes are bad for families. This qualitative study (N = 85) examines work, family, provider, and subsidy-related factors contributing to childcare changes among families with low incomes. We focus on the desirability—the extent to which parents wanted to leave their provider—and the planned nature of childcare changes—the extent to which parents anticipated the change and had time to plan. We find that although nearly all desired changes were planned, undesired changes were both planned and unplanned. Planning was important but not enough for finding care that aligned with family needs, and undesired changes, especially sudden changes, were often driven by the loss of a childcare subsidy, sometimes accompanied by a job loss. We discuss how these findings can help researchers and policymakers understand the implications of complex childcare trajectories for family well-being and early care and education policy.