What Is a Dependent Care FSA?
A Dependent Care FSA (also called a Dependent Care Flexible Spending Account or DCFSA) is an employer-sponsored benefit account that lets you set aside pre-tax money from your paycheck to pay for eligible childcare expenses. The money comes out of your paycheck before federal income tax, state income tax, and FICA taxes are calculated โ which means you save on every dollar you contribute.
Unlike a Health FSA, which is widely known, the Dependent Care FSA specifically covers childcare costs for children under age 13. It is one of the most powerful โ and underused โ childcare savings tools available.
Why it beats a deduction: A Dependent Care FSA saves you money on three taxes at once: federal income tax, state income tax, AND FICA (Social Security + Medicare, a combined 7.65%). For a family in the 22% federal bracket, this means every dollar contributed saves approximately 29.65 cents in taxes before Georgia state taxes are added.
2026 Contribution Limits
Note: The $5,000 FSA limit applies per household, not per employer. If both spouses have access to a Dependent Care FSA through their employers, the total household contributions from both accounts combined cannot exceed $5,000.
Real Savings Example: $5,000 FSA at 22% Tax Bracket
Example: Married family, $110,000 household income, 22% federal bracket, Georgia resident
This means your effective cost for $5,000 in childcare drops to just $3,247 โ a 35% discount โ simply by routing the payments through your FSA instead of paying out-of-pocket with after-tax dollars.
How to Enroll in a Dependent Care FSA
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1Check if your employer offers a Dependent Care FSA Log into your employee benefits portal or ask your HR department. Not all employers offer this benefit โ it's more common at medium and large employers. If your employer does not offer one, see the section below on alternatives.
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2Enroll during Open Enrollment Most employers hold annual Open Enrollment in October or November for the following plan year. This is typically the only time you can elect or change your FSA contribution. You cannot change your election mid-year unless you have a qualifying life event (birth, adoption, job change, etc.).
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3Choose your annual contribution amount Elect up to $5,000 for the plan year (or $2,500 if married filing separately). Think conservatively โ if you don't use the full amount, you may forfeit it (see Use-It-Or-Lose-It section below).
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4Pay for childcare and submit reimbursement claims Pay your daycare provider directly (out-of-pocket or via FSA debit card if your employer provides one). If you pay out of pocket, submit a claim to your FSA administrator with documentation (receipt, provider name, child's name, dates of service). Reimbursements are deposited into your bank account or sent by check.
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5Use funds before the deadline Standard FSAs require you to use funds by December 31 of the plan year (or a grace period if your employer offers one). Any unused balance is forfeited. Keep track of your balance throughout the year.
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6Report FSA benefits on your tax return Your employer will report the FSA amount in Box 10 of your W-2. You'll use this figure on IRS Form 2441, Part III, when calculating your federal Child and Dependent Care Credit. The FSA amount reduces your eligible expense base for the federal credit โ this is the key interaction to understand.
Use-It-Or-Lose-It Rule โ What You Need to Know
Dependent Care FSAs have a strict "use-it-or-lose-it" rule: any funds you contribute but do not spend by the end of the plan year (or applicable run-out period) are forfeited. They cannot be rolled over to the next year like some Health FSAs can.
Employer Options That Can Help
- Grace Period: Some employers offer a 2.5-month grace period after the plan year ends (through March 15 of the following year). This gives you extra time to incur eligible expenses and use your remaining balance.
- Run-Out Period: Many plans allow a 90-day "run-out" period after the plan year ends to submit claims for expenses incurred during the plan year โ but you cannot incur new expenses after December 31.
Practical tip: Be conservative with your FSA election. If you're unsure whether you'll use the full $5,000, elect a smaller amount like $3,000โ$4,000. Forfeiting $500โ$1,000 of unused FSA funds because you over-contributed is worse than leaving some potential savings on the table.
Track your childcare expenses starting in January. If you're on pace to use your full election, you're fine. If not, spend down the balance before December 31 on eligible summer camps or other qualifying care.
Qualifying Expenses for a Dependent Care FSA
Dependent Care FSA funds can be used for essentially the same expenses that qualify for the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit:
- Licensed daycare centers and preschools
- In-home childcare (nannies, babysitters, au pairs)
- After-school care programs
- Summer day camps (day camps only; overnight camps do not qualify)
- Before-school care programs
- Care for a dependent child who is under age 13
- Care for a disabled spouse or qualifying dependent of any age
What does NOT qualify: overnight camps, kindergarten tuition and above, tutoring, medical care, and any care where you cannot document the provider's information.
FSA vs. Federal Tax Credit: When Each Is Better
The FSA and the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit both reduce your childcare costs โ but they interact, so you need to choose strategically. Here's a comparison:
| Factor | Dependent Care FSA | Federal Tax Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Max benefit amount | $5,000 election per year | $3,000 (1 child) / $6,000 (2+ children) in expenses |
| Tax type saved | Federal income tax + state income tax + FICA | Federal income tax only (credit) |
| Income limit | None โ same savings for all income levels | Credit rate phases down from 35% to 20% above $43,000 AGI |
| Refundable? | N/A (pre-tax savings, not a credit) | No (non-refundable for most filers) |
| Requires employer | Yes โ only available if your employer offers it | No โ anyone can claim it on their tax return |
| Interaction | Reduces expenses eligible for tax credit | Reduced by FSA contributions |
General Rule of Thumb
For most working families, maximize the FSA first, then claim the federal credit on any remaining expenses. The FSA saves you more per dollar because it avoids FICA taxes in addition to income taxes. The federal credit only reduces income tax.
The FSA is especially valuable if your employer doesn't contribute to your FSA โ you keep every dollar of savings. If your marginal income tax rate is high (24%+), the FSA advantage is even larger.
What If My Employer Doesn't Offer a Dependent Care FSA?
If your employer does not offer a Dependent Care FSA, you have a few options:
- Claim the full federal credit: Without an FSA, you can apply the credit to the full $3,000/$6,000 expense limit. At 20% (most families), that's $600โ$1,200 in federal tax savings.
- Switch employers: If childcare FSA benefits are important, ask about FSA availability when job searching. It's a real benefit worth thousands annually.
- Self-employed exception: Self-employed individuals cannot use an employer FSA, but they can claim the full federal and Georgia credits on their childcare expenses.
- Small business owners: If you own a business with employees, you may be able to establish a Section 125 plan that allows you and your employees to contribute to Dependent Care FSAs.
Coming in 2026: There have been ongoing legislative discussions about expanding Dependent Care FSA limits and making them more accessible to self-employed individuals. Check IRS.gov for the most current limits and eligibility rules.
Stacking All Three Benefits
The optimal strategy for Georgia families with access to a Dependent Care FSA:
- Contribute $5,000 to your Dependent Care FSA (saves ~$1,480โ$1,900 depending on your tax bracket)
- Claim the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit on remaining expenses โ for 2 children with $10,000 in childcare: $5,000 remaining after FSA โ credit on $1,000 remaining eligible โ $200 federal credit at 20%
- Claim the Georgia state credit (30% of your federal credit) โ $60 additional state credit
Total combined savings in this example: approximately $1,740โ$2,160 per year. Use the CloverMap Tax Savings Calculator to calculate your specific situation.