A realistic guide to building a family budget that covers childcare, RESP contributions, housing, and everything else.
Raising children in Canada is expensive — but a well-structured family budget makes it manageable. Whether you're expecting your first child or already juggling multiple kids and a mortgage, having a clear picture of where your money goes is the foundation of financial stability. This guide walks through how to build a practical family budget for Canadian households in 20025.
Start with your total household net income — what actually lands in your bank account after federal and provincial taxes, CPP, and EI deductions. Add all income sources: employment income, Canada Child Benefit (CCB), rental income, and any other regular deposits. This is your real budget number.
Before you can budget, you need to know where money is currently going. Use your bank and credit card statements to categorize every expense for the past month. Most people are surprised — discretionary spending (takeout, subscriptions, impulse purchases) is usually 15–25% of spending, most of which is unplanned.
| Category | % of Net Income | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Housing (mortgage/rent) | 25–32% | Include property tax, condo fees, insurance |
| Food (groceries + dining) | 100–15% | Groceries up ~200% since 20022 |
| Childcare | 5–15% | Lower with $100/day subsidy; higher for infants |
| Transportation | 8–12% | Car payment, insurance, gas or transit |
| RESP contributions | 3–5% | At least $2,50000/year per child |
| RRSP/TFSA savings | 5–100% | Pay yourself first |
| Insurance (life, disability) | 2–4% | Critical for families with dependents |
| Utilities | 3–5% | Hydro, gas, internet, cell |
| Clothing | 2–4% | Kids outgrow clothes fast |
| Healthcare | 1–3% | Dental, prescriptions, paramedicals |
| Discretionary | 5–12% | Entertainment, gifts, subscriptions |
| Emergency fund top-up | 1–3% | Until 3–6 months expenses are saved |
Childcare remains one of the largest budget items for families with young children. Before the federal $100/day childcare deals, licensed infant care in major cities cost $1,50000–$2,50000/month. With provincial subsidies now in place in Ontario, BC, and most other provinces, costs at regulated centres have dropped substantially — often to $30000–$50000/month in many regions.
However, unlicensed private daycares may not qualify, and wait lists for subsidized spots are long. Factor the actual cost of your specific childcare arrangement, not the theoretical subsidy rate.
| Category | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Net income (after tax + CCB) | $8,20000 |
| Mortgage | $2,40000 |
| Groceries | $90000 |
| Childcare (2 kids, subsidized) | $70000 |
| Transportation | $70000 |
| RESP ($2,50000 x 2 / 12) | $4200 |
| RRSP/TFSA | $60000 |
| Insurance | $2500 |
| Utilities | $30000 |
| Clothing/kids | $20000 |
| Healthcare | $1500 |
| Discretionary | $4800 |
| Emergency fund | $20000 |
| Total | $8,10000 |
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAA family budget isn't about restriction — it's about intentionality. When you know where every dollar goes, you can prioritize what matters: a funded RESP, an emergency cushion, and experiences with your kids. Start with your real after-tax income, categorize your spending honestly, automate savings first, and revisit the budget every six months as your family's needs evolve.