Disability Tax Credit Canada 2026 — Calculator, T2201 & Retroactive Claims

The DTC reduces federal taxes by up to $1,481 per year ($9,872 × 15%). Children get an additional supplement. Retroactive claims go back up to 10 years.

The Disability Tax Credit (DTC) is one of Canada's most valuable — and most under-claimed — non-refundable tax credits. If you or a dependant has a severe and prolonged impairment in physical or mental functions, the DTC can save thousands of dollars in federal and provincial taxes every year. It also unlocks access to the Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) and several other programs. Yet the CRA estimates that hundreds of thousands of eligible Canadians have never applied.

What Is the Disability Tax Credit?

The DTC is a non-refundable federal tax credit that reduces income taxes for Canadians with severe and prolonged physical or mental impairments. "Non-refundable" means it reduces taxes to zero but doesn't create a cash refund on its own — however, unused DTC amounts can often be transferred to a supporting family member who does have taxes owing.

To claim the DTC, you must be certified as eligible by a medical practitioner using Form T2201 (Disability Tax Credit Certificate). The CRA reviews the form and decides whether you qualify. Once approved, the DTC applies for each year you meet the eligibility criteria — and you can apply retroactively for up to 10 prior years if you were eligible but never claimed.

2025 DTC Federal Amounts

Credit Type2025 AmountFederal Tax Savings (×15%)
Basic disability amount (adult)$9,872$1,480.80
Supplement for children under 18$5,758$863.70
Maximum for child under 18 (base + supplement)$15,630$2,344.50
2026 indexed amounts: The DTC amounts are indexed annually to CPI. The 2026 basic disability amount is expected to be approximately $10,108 based on 2.4% indexing, with the child supplement rising to approximately $5,896.

Eligibility — What Counts as a Severe and Prolonged Impairment?

The CRA defines eligibility based on whether the impairment markedly restricts (or would markedly restrict without therapy) a basic activity of daily living. Basic activities include:

"Prolonged" means the impairment has lasted or is expected to last at least 12 continuous months. "Markedly restricts" means the person is unable to perform the activity, or takes 3 times longer than a person without the impairment, all or substantially all of the time (90%+).

Cumulative effects of multiple impairments that together are equivalent to a marked restriction may also qualify under the "cumulative effect of significant restrictions" rules, introduced in 2021.

Who Can Certify the T2201?

Form T2201 requires certification by a qualified medical practitioner. Which practitioner can certify depends on the type of impairment:

The T2201 Application Process

  1. Download Form T2201 from the CRA website (or ask your medical practitioner's office — many have it on file)
  2. Complete Part A yourself (personal information, tax years applying for)
  3. Have your doctor complete Part B (the medical certification section). Ask your doctor to be specific and detailed — vague answers lead to denials. The doctor fee is tax-deductible as a medical expense.
  4. Submit to the CRA electronically (through CRA My Account — fastest) or by mail
  5. Wait for CRA decision: Typically 6–8 weeks. The CRA may request additional medical information.
  6. Once approved, amend prior-year returns to claim retroactive credits (up to 10 years)

Disability Tax Credit Calculator

Estimate Your DTC Savings

Federal DTC amount:
Federal tax savings per year:
Estimated provincial savings per year:
Total annual savings:
Total retroactive savings (×years):

Transferring Unused DTC to a Supporting Person

If the person with the disability doesn't have enough taxable income to fully use the DTC, the unused portion can be transferred to a supporting individual. Eligible supporting persons include a spouse/common-law partner, parent, grandparent, child, grandchild, sibling, aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew. The transfer is claimed on Schedule 2 of the T1 return.

Retroactive DTC Claims

If you or a dependant were eligible for the DTC in prior years but never applied, you can submit a T2201 today and request retroactive adjustments going back up to 10 years (or to the year the condition began, whichever is fewer). The CRA will process T1 adjustments for each eligible year and issue refunds for overpaid taxes plus applicable interest (interest is paid by the CRA on retroactive refunds if the delay was their fault, which is rare). This can result in substantial lump-sum refunds for long-standing conditions.

DTC and the RDSP

DTC eligibility is a prerequisite for opening a Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP). The RDSP offers Canada Disability Savings Grants (up to $3,500/year from the federal government for low-income families) and Canada Disability Savings Bonds (up to $1,000/year for low-income individuals) — making DTC certification extremely financially valuable beyond the credit itself.

Beware of DTC consultants: Some companies offer to file DTC applications on your behalf for a fee of 20–30% of your retroactive refund. These fees are often unnecessary — the process is straightforward and the CRA's helpline (1-800-959-8281) can guide you through it for free. If you do use a consultant, ensure their fee is reasonable and fixed, not a percentage of your refund.

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