If youβre a working parent in Canada, child care can be one of your biggest monthly expenses. The good news? The government allows you to deduct eligible child care costs on your personal tax return.
At Toro Accounting, we help families structure and claim child care expenses correctly to reduce taxes and avoid CRA reassessments.
Hereβs what you need to know.
Child care expenses are amounts paid to have someone look after your child so you can:
β Work
β Run a business
β Attend school
β Conduct research
β Look for work
The rules are set by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).
Official CRA reference:
π Line 21400 β Child care expenses - Canada.ca
Typically:
This is a deduction, not a tax credit β meaning it reduces your taxable income.
You can claim expenses for:
β Daycare centres
β Licensed home daycare
β Babysitters
β Nannies
β Day camps
β Boarding schools (partial amount)
You must have receipts showing:
β Private school tuition (education portion)
β Sports programs
β Music lessons
β Overnight camps (education component)
β Payments to your spouse
β Payments to a child under 18
The maximum annual deduction per child:
However, the deduction is limited to:
You must use the lowest of these amounts.
β Keep detailed receipts
β Ensure the caregiver reports the income
β Plan income splitting strategically
β Consider how child care affects Canada Child Benefit (CCB)
Because it reduces net income, claiming child care expenses may increase income-tested benefits.
β Higher-income spouse claiming the deduction incorrectly
β Missing caregiver SIN
β Claiming non-eligible programs
β Not filing Form T778 properly
Accuracy matters β CRA reviews child care claims closely.
At Toro Accounting, we:
β Determine which spouse should claim
β Calculate the maximum allowable deduction
β Review receipts for compliance
β Optimize your return to increase overall tax savings
Every familyβs situation is different β and proper planning can mean thousands in savings.
If you paid child care expenses this year and want to make sure you're claiming them correctly:
π Book your personal tax consultation here