Financial Guide for Women Returning to Work in Canada 2025

Returning to paid work after a maternity leave, parental leave, caregiving break, or extended career pause is a significant financial transition. Your income changes, your tax situation shifts, new expenses emerge (childcare, commuting, work wardrobe), and your benefits and savings need to be re-assessed. This guide helps Canadian women navigate the financial aspects of returning to work smoothly and strategically.

Understanding Your New Tax Situation

When you return to work after a period of low or no income, your tax situation changes significantly. Key considerations:

Childcare: The Return-to-Work Calculation

The single biggest financial consideration for most women returning to work is childcare. Before returning, calculate your net return-to-work income after childcare costs and taxes to ensure the financial case makes sense. Remember that childcare costs are deductible — run the numbers including the Child Care Expense Deduction.

Also factor in career equity: staying home to avoid childcare costs has a long-term cost in CPP contributions, RRSP room, career advancement, and pension accrual. A period of negative or near-zero net benefit from returning to work can still be the right long-term financial decision.

Re-Activating Your Benefits

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Rebuilding Your Savings After a Break

RRSP: Maximize Contributions Now

Returning to higher income means higher tax rates — the ideal time to accelerate RRSP contributions. Check your Notice of Assessment or CRA My Account for accumulated unused contribution room from your leave years. You may have significant carried-forward room to deploy in your first few high-income years back at work.

TFSA: Replenish Withdrawals

If you withdrew from your TFSA during your leave, you can re-contribute those amounts starting January 1 of the following year. Replenish your TFSA as a priority to restore your tax-free growth potential.

Emergency Fund

If your emergency fund was depleted during the leave period, rebuild it before increasing investment contributions. Target three to six months of household expenses.

Updating Your Financial Plan

A career break affects your long-term financial projections — particularly retirement income. When you return to work, it is worth revisiting your retirement plan with a financial advisor or retirement calculator to understand:

Negotiating Salary on Return

If you are returning to the same employer, negotiate a salary review — especially if your role or the market has changed during your absence. Many women return at the same salary they left, losing ground to inflation and market movement. Use this transition as an opportunity to renegotiate, particularly if you have new skills, qualifications, or expanded responsibilities.

Return-to-Work Financial Checklist: Update TD1 forms → enroll in group benefits → re-join pension/group RRSP → update CCB estimate → claim child care expense deduction at tax time → check RRSP room → set up automatic savings transfer on first payday → review CPP statement.