In this paper the author present evidence on the impact of distance to school and school availability on households' decisions concern primary age children's time allocation between work, schooling and household chores activities using data from the Ghana Living Standard Survey 1998-99 (GLSS) and the Guatemalan Living Standards Measurement Survey 2000 (ENCOVI). Overall, the results indicate that the increased and eased access to school has a well-defined impact on children's time use with both similarities and striking dissimilarities between the chosen countries. In particular, in Ghana the availability and the travel distance from schools (both primary and middle) in the community influence children's work in both economic activities and household chores and school attendance. The longer the travel time to school the more difficult is for children to reconcile work and school attendance. In Guatemala, secondary school access constraints have almost no effect on children's time allocation. In addition, reducing the cost of access to primary education has an effect only on children's school attendance but it does reduce neither child work nor time spent in household chores. The results are robust to control for the endogeneity of school placement and per capita expenditures.