If you or a family member require assistance with daily living activities due to a medical condition or disability, the amounts paid for that care may qualify as eligible medical expenses on your tax return.
At Toro Accounting, we help families structure these claims properly to maximize the Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) and avoid common CRA issues.
Hereβs what you need to know.
Attendant care expenses are payments made to a person or agency that provides personal care services to someone with a severe physical or mental impairment.
These rules are administered by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).
If the requirements are met, these expenses can be claimed as part of the Medical Expense Tax Credit.
Eligible services generally include assistance with:
β Personal hygiene (bathing, dressing)
β Feeding
β Mobility support
β Administering medication
β Supervisory care due to cognitive impairment
β In-home personal support
Care may be provided:
The caregiver may be:
β A hired caregiver
β A professional agency
β An independent support worker
The caregiver cannot be:
β Your spouse
β A person under 18 years old
Valid receipts must include the caregiverβs name, address, and identification details.
Attendant care expenses may be claimed for:
β Yourself
β Your spouse or common-law partner
β Your children
β Other eligible dependants
In many cases, expanded rules apply if the individual qualifies for the Disability Tax Credit (DTC).
Attendant care expenses are included as medical expenses on the T1 return:
Like other medical expenses, only the portion exceeding:
π 3% of net income (or the annual CRA maximum, whichever is less)
will generate a tax credit.
Attendant care expenses should not be confused with:
Each has different rules and tax treatment.
In some cases, it may be more advantageous to claim:
Strategic planning matters.
Proper structuring may allow you to:
β Coordinate with the Disability Tax Credit
β Optimize which family member claims the expense
β Maximize the total household tax benefit
β Avoid duplication or disallowed claims
The CRA reviews these claims carefully, so documentation is critical.
β Claiming payments made to ineligible family members
β Not maintaining proper receipts
β Confusing attendant care with child care
β Failing to review interaction with DTC or other deductions
Careful reporting reduces reassessment risk.
At Toro Accounting, we:
β Review eligibility under CRA rules
β Coordinate attendant care with other disability-related credits
β Optimize which family member claims the expense
β Ensure proper documentation
β Reduce CRA reassessment risk
When caring for a loved one, tax planning should support your financial stability β not create uncertainty.
If you or a family member are paying for attendant care and want to ensure itβs claimed correctly:
π Book your appointment here