Canadian Tax Credits 2025: Complete List and Guide

Canada offers dozens of federal tax credits that can significantly reduce the amount of tax you owe — or even result in a payment to you. Understanding the difference between refundable and non-refundable credits, and knowing which ones you qualify for, can save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars each year.

Credit vs. Deduction: A tax credit reduces your tax owing directly (e.g., a $500 credit reduces your tax bill by $500). A tax deduction reduces your taxable income (e.g., a $1,000 deduction at a 30% rate saves you $300 in tax). Credits are generally more valuable dollar-for-dollar.

Refundable vs. Non-Refundable Credits

Non-Refundable A non-refundable tax credit can reduce your tax to zero, but any unused portion is lost — it cannot generate a refund beyond what you owe. Most personal credits are non-refundable.

Refundable A refundable tax credit can reduce your tax below zero, meaning you receive the remainder as a cash payment even if you paid no tax at all. These are extremely valuable for low-income filers.

Key Federal Non-Refundable Tax Credits 2025

CreditAmount / RateWho Qualifies
Basic Personal Amount$16,129 × 15%All Canadian residents
Spouse or Common-Law Partner AmountUp to $16,129 × 15%Supporting a spouse with low/no income
Eligible Dependent AmountUp to $16,129 × 15%Single parents supporting a dependent
Age Amount$8,396 × 15% (income-tested)Canadians aged 65+
Pension Income AmountUp to $2,000 × 15%Those receiving eligible pension income
Disability Tax Credit$9,872 × 15%Severe and prolonged impairment (T2201)
Canada Caregiver CreditUp to $7,999 × 15%Caring for infirm dependent relatives
Medical Expense Tax CreditExpenses over 3% of net income × 15%All filers with eligible medical costs
Charitable Donation Tax Credit15% on first $200; 29%–33% overDonors to registered charities
Tuition Tax CreditTuition paid × 15%Post-secondary students
Interest on Student LoansInterest paid × 15%Those repaying government student loans
Home Buyers' Amount$100 × 15%First-time home buyers
Adoption Expense CreditUp to $18,210 × 15%Eligible adoption expenses
Canada Employment AmountUp to $1,433 × 15%Employees with employment income
Digital News Subscription CreditUp to $500 × 15%Subscriptions to qualifying digital news

Key Federal Refundable Tax Credits 2025

Credit / BenefitAmountWho Qualifies
GST/HST CreditUp to ~$519/year per adultLow and modest-income individuals
Canada Child Benefit (CCB)Up to $7,786/year per child under 6Families with children under 18
Canada Workers Benefit (CWB)Up to $1,518 (basic)Low-income workers
Refundable Medical Expense SupplementUp to $1,464Low-income workers with high medical costs
Climate Action Incentive (Canada Carbon Rebate)Varies by provinceResidents of participating provinces

How to Claim Tax Credits

Most tax credits are claimed directly on your T1 income tax return. Tax software will guide you through a series of questions to identify which credits you qualify for. Some credits require supporting documentation:

Transferring and Carrying Forward Credits

Some non-refundable credits can be transferred to a spouse or supporting person when you cannot use them yourself:

Unused tuition credits can also be carried forward to future years indefinitely.

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