Canada

Individual - Other tax credits and incentives

Last reviewed - 10 December 2024

Federal personal tax credits

Federal personal allowances in Canada take the form of tax credits. The following credits apply for 2025.

Federal personal tax credits (1, 2) CAD
Basic personal (3) 2,108 to 2,339
Married (3, 4) 2,108 to 2,339
Infirm dependants aged 18 and over (4) 1,247
Disability (5) 1,470
Age - Persons aged 65 and over (4, 5) 1,309

 

Other key credits (2)
Pension income 14.5% of eligible pension income (maximum credit is CAD 290). (5)
Tuition fees 14.5% of eligible fees (minimum CAD 100 per institution). Unused credits can be carried forward indefinitely. (5)
Interest on student loans 14.5% of the interest paid on loans under the Canada Student Loans Act and provincial student loan programs. Unused credits can be carried forward five years.
Medical expenses 14.5% of amount by which eligible expenses exceed lesser of CAD 2,834 (1) and 3% of net income (generally, expenses for any 12-month period ending in the year can be claimed). (6)
Adoption 14.5% of eligible adoption expenses (maximum credit is CAD 2,839). Must be claimed in the year the adoption period ends. (6)
Charitable donations (7) 14.5% of the first CAD 200 and the excess is at either 29% or 33% (7). Eligible donations are generally limited to 75% of net income. Unused donations can be carried forward five years. (6)
Government pension plan (8) and employment insurance plan contributions 14.5% of the lesser of the base (non-enhanced) amount payable and the required base premiums for the year (maximum credit is CAD 643; in Quebec, CAD 547 (9)).
Employment 14.5% of employment income (maximum credit is CAD 213).

Notes

  1. Personal credits are indexed for inflation; the value of the credit is based on an indexed amount multiplied by the lowest marginal personal tax rate, which the newly re-elected federal minority government has proposed to decrease from 15% to 14%, effective 1 July 2025 (effectively 14.5% for 2025).
  2. Any unused portion of the tax credits is not refundable.
  3. The basic/spouse/equivalent to spouse amounts are increased from CAD 2,108 to CAD 2,339 for taxpayers with taxable income below the second top tax bracket (i.e. CAD 177,882 in 2025), with the benefit of the increased personal amounts eliminated when taxable income reaches the top tax bracket (i.e. CAD 253,414 in 2025).
  4. The credit is reduced if the income of the individual or dependant exceeds a threshold.
  5. In some circumstances, the unused portion of the credit can be transferred to a spouse, parent, grandparent, child, grandchild, sibling, aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew.
  6. One spouse can claim the other's medical expenses, charitable donations, and adoption expenses.
  7. For total charitable donations in a year exceeding CAD 200, the tax credit rate is:
    • 33%, to the extent the individual has income that is subject to the federal 33% income tax rate, and
    • 29% for other donations.
  8. Starting 2019, Canadian government pension plan contributions were increased by an enhancement that will be phased-in over seven years. The enhanced portion is deductible, while the non-enhanced base portion remains eligible for a tax credit.
  9. In Quebec, federal values are reduced by 16.5%. The amount shown reflects this reduction.

Provincial and territorial personal tax credits

The provinces and territories have many personal tax credits that are similar to the federal personal tax credits. However, the provinces and territories set the amounts of their personal tax credits.