Child Care Expense Deduction in Canada 2025

If you pay for child care so you or your spouse can work, attend school, or run a business, you may be able to deduct those expenses from your income. The child care expense deduction is one of the most valuable deductions available to Canadian families with young children.

Key rule: The child care expense deduction must generally be claimed by the lower-income spouse. There are exceptions for certain situations (student, disabled, etc.), but the default rule is the lower-income partner claims it.

Deduction Limits by Child Age

Child TypeAnnual Deduction Limit
Children under 7 years old at end of year$8,000 per child
Children aged 7–16 at end of year$5,000 per child
Children with a disability (eligible for DTC)$11,000 per child

These limits apply per child. A family with two children under 7 could deduct up to $16,000 in child care expenses. The deduction is limited to 2/3 of the lower-income spouse's earned income.

What Qualifies as a Child Care Expense?

Eligible child care expenses include payments made for the care of a child so that you (or your spouse) can earn income, carry on a business, or attend school full-time or part-time:

What Does NOT Qualify

Who Claims the Deduction?

The deduction must be claimed by the lower-income spouse or common-law partner. Exceptions where the higher-income spouse can claim include:

Receipts and Documentation

You must have receipts for all claimed child care expenses. Receipts from a daycare or after-school program should show the provider's name, address, and business number. If you pay a nanny or individual caregiver, you need their SIN and must issue them a T4 if you are considered their employer. The CRA does not require you to submit receipts with your return, but you must keep them in case of review.

How to Claim

Child care expenses are claimed on Form T778 (Child Care Expenses Deduction), which is included in all major tax software. The deduction reduces your net income on line 21400 of your T1 return. Because it is a deduction (not a credit), it reduces your taxable income at your marginal rate.

Interaction with Other Benefits

Reducing your net income through the child care deduction also increases income-tested benefits. A lower net income means higher Canada Child Benefit payments, higher GST/HST Credit, and eligibility for other means-tested programs. The cascading effect makes this deduction even more valuable than the face-value tax saving.

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