ABSTRACT This study examined the concurrent contributions of mothers, fathers, and other caregivers’ cognitive and socioemotional home stimulation to children’s school readiness skills in a sample of Ghanaian kindergartners measured at two time-points across one school year (N = 2,975; M age = 5.2 years; 49% female). Research Findings: Multiple regression analyses showed that mothers and other caregivers’ stimulation – but not fathers – predicted child outcomes. Specifically, in lagged models controlling for children’s fall scores, there were small, positive statistically significant associations between mothers’ cognitive stimulation with literacy, numeracy and motor skills, and between other caregivers’ cognitive stimulation and executive function. With regard to socioemotional stimulation, only mothers’ stimulation was significantly associated with one child outcome – literacy. Father’s stimulation practices were not associated with any child outcomes. Practice or Policy: Although our results are small in magnitude, the findings support the growing evidence from sub-Saharan Africa that home stimulation is an important driver of child development and extends this work by examining different domains of stimulation, as well as contributions from various caregivers in the household. Findings highlight the need for interventions to adopt a family-inclusive approach that engages not only mothers but other caregivers to maximize improvements in children’s development.