Child Support Payments in Canada 2025: Tax Treatment

How child support is calculated, what it covers, and the complete tax picture for payers and recipients.

Child support is one of the most financially significant obligations that arises from separation or divorce in Canada. Understanding how amounts are determined and — critically — how child support is treated for tax purposes helps both payers and recipients plan their finances accurately. The rules changed significantly in 1997 and the post-1997 framework is what applies to virtually all current orders and agreements.

The Federal Child Support Guidelines

Canada uses the Federal Child Support Guidelines (FCSG) to standardize child support amounts. The guidelines provide monthly support tables based on two variables: the paying parent's gross annual income and the number of children. This removes much of the negotiation and court discretion that existed before 1997.

Each province and territory has its own table within the guidelines reflecting provincial income tax rates. The monthly amounts are set so that after-tax, the support represents a reasonable contribution to the child's living costs in the recipient household.

How Child Support Is Calculated

FactorDetails
Payer's gross incomeLine 15000 of tax return (total income)
Number of childrenEach additional child increases the amount
Province of residencePayer's province determines which table applies
Custody arrangementSole, shared (40%+), or split custody affects calculation

Sample Monthly Amounts (Ontario, 2025)

Annual Income1 Child2 Children3 Children
$50,000$465$742$966
$75,000$701$1,121$1,459
$100,000$935$1,494$1,944
$150,000$1,330$2,105$2,719

Approximate figures based on Federal Child Support Guidelines tables. Verify current amounts at justice.gc.ca/childsupp.

Tax Treatment of Child Support: Post-1997 Rules

This is the most important financial distinction for child support in Canada:

PartyTax Treatment
PayerChild support payments are NOT tax-deductible
RecipientChild support payments are NOT taxable income

This is the opposite of spousal support. Child support flows from payer to recipient with no tax adjustment on either side. The payer pays from after-tax dollars; the recipient receives tax-free.

Pre-1997 orders: Court orders or written agreements made before May 1, 1997 followed the old rules (deductible for payer, taxable for recipient). If your order was made after 1997 or has been varied since, post-1997 rules apply. Check your order date — the "commencement day" determines which regime applies.

Section 7 Special and Extraordinary Expenses

Beyond the base table amount, parents share certain "special or extraordinary expenses" (Section 7 expenses) proportional to their respective incomes. These are expenses that are necessary, reasonable, and in the child's best interests, above and beyond the base support amount.

Common Section 7 expenses include:

How sharing works: If the payer earns 60% of combined income and the recipient earns 40%, Section 7 expenses are shared 60/40. Both parents must agree on or obtain a court order for Section 7 expenses — they are not automatically part of the base support amount.

Shared Custody (40% Rule)

When each parent has the child at least 40% of the time (shared custody), the standard guideline amount doesn't apply automatically. Instead, the court may consider the difference between what each parent would pay if they were the payer, and the increased costs of a shared custody arrangement. This often results in a lower net payment than sole custody scenarios but is not a simple offset calculation.

Variations to Child Support

Child support can be varied when there is a change in circumstances — typically a significant change in either parent's income. In Canada, parents are generally required to disclose income annually. If the payer's income changes by more than 10–15%, either party can apply to vary the order. Variations are retroactive to the date of the application in most cases.

Enforcing Child Support

Each province has a Maintenance Enforcement Program (MEP) that can enforce court-ordered child support through wage garnishment, driver's licence suspension, passport denial, and seizure of assets. Registering your order with the MEP provides automatic enforcement without having to return to court.

Impact on Other Benefits

Because child support is not income for the recipient, it does not affect:

This is a meaningful financial advantage of the post-1997 tax treatment — the recipient keeps full benefit entitlements regardless of child support received.

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Bottom Line

Child support in Canada is calculated using standardized federal tables based on the payer's income and number of children. For post-1997 orders — which covers essentially all current arrangements — payments are neither deductible for the payer nor taxable for the recipient. Section 7 expenses are shared proportionally and are separate from base support. Keep income disclosure current, register orders with your provincial MEP, and review support amounts when incomes change significantly.