Perform 200+ eligible volunteer hours? Claim the $3,000 federal amount — worth $450 in federal tax savings — plus provincial credits in most provinces.
Canada recognizes the enormous contribution of volunteer firefighters and search and rescue (SAR) volunteers through dedicated non-refundable tax credits. If you performed at least 200 hours of eligible volunteer services during 2025, you can claim a $3,000 federal credit amount on your T1 return. This translates to $450 in federal tax savings (at the 15% federal credit rate), with additional provincial credits available in most provinces.
The volunteer firefighter tax credit allows eligible volunteer firefighters to claim a $3,000 non-refundable credit amount on Line 31220 of their T1 return. The federal tax savings are $3,000 × 15% = $450.
Eligibility requirements:
The search and rescue volunteer tax credit mirrors the VFTC exactly — $3,000 on Line 31240, worth $450 in federal tax savings. It applies to eligible SAR volunteers who perform at least 200 hours of eligible SAR services during the year with eligible SAR organizations.
Eligible SAR organizations include:
Eligible SAR hours include: Responding to SAR incidents, standby time during an active search, training required by the SAR organization, and attending organizational meetings.
No — you cannot claim both the VFTC and the SARTC in the same tax year. If you were both a volunteer firefighter and a SAR volunteer in 2025, you must choose which credit to claim. You would naturally choose the credit for which you have the stronger eligibility (i.e., whichever activity accumulated 200+ hours). If both exceed 200 hours, choose one — the credit amount is identical ($3,000) either way.
However, you can combine volunteer firefighting and SAR hours to reach 200 hours total and claim one of the credits. Wait — actually the rules require 200 hours in a single role (VFTC or SARTC separately). Check the CRA's latest guidance for combination rules, as they have evolved.
Many fire departments and SAR organizations pay their volunteers a small honorarium (an annual token payment). The first $1,000 of volunteer honoraria from a single organization is exempt from income — you don't report it on your return. Any amount above $1,000 per organization must be included in your income as employment income.
The VFTC is claimed on Line 31220 and the SARTC on Line 31240 of your T1 return. In tax software, look for these under the credits section — most software has a specific section for volunteer amounts. You do not submit documentation with your return, but you must maintain records:
Most provinces offer their own volunteer firefighter and/or SAR volunteer credits in addition to the federal amount. Provincial credit amounts vary:
Combined federal and provincial savings for an Ontario volunteer firefighter in the lowest tax bracket: approximately $450 (federal) + $150 (Ontario) = $600 in total tax savings.
For the VFTC and SARTC, a volunteer is someone who provides services without expectation of payment beyond a nominal honorarium (under $1,000/year). Part-time paid firefighters — those receiving a wage or salary beyond a nominal amount — do not qualify. Full-time career firefighters, even if they occasionally volunteer with a different department on their days off, generally do not qualify because they derive their principal occupation income from firefighting.
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