๐Ÿ’ต IRS Form 2441

Federal Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit

A non-refundable federal tax credit worth 20โ€“35% of your eligible childcare expenses. For 2026, you can claim up to $3,000 for one qualifying child or $6,000 for two or more.

CloverMap ยท 2026 Georgia Families Tax Guide

What Is This Credit?

The Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC) is a federal income tax credit designed to offset the cost of childcare that allows you and your spouse to work. It is claimed annually on your federal tax return using IRS Form 2441.

Unlike a tax deduction, which reduces your taxable income, this is a direct credit โ€” it reduces the actual tax you owe dollar-for-dollar. However, it is non-refundable, meaning it can only reduce your tax liability to zero; you cannot receive the excess as a refund.

2026 Credit Limits: 20โ€“35% of up to $3,000 in expenses for 1 qualifying child, or up to $6,000 for 2 or more qualifying children. Maximum credit: $600 (1 child) to $2,100 (2+ children) for lower-income families.

Most families earning above $43,000 receive a flat 20% credit rate, making the maximum credit $600 (1 child) or $1,200 (2+ children).

Who Qualifies for the Credit?

Qualifying Persons

Your care expenses must be for one or more "qualifying persons":

Qualifying Taxpayer Requirements

Qualifying Childcare Provider

How Much Can You Claim? (2026 Income Phase-Out Table)

The credit percentage starts at 35% for families with AGI under $15,000 and phases down to 20% for families with AGI above $43,000. There is no upper income limit โ€” the 20% rate applies to all higher-income taxpayers.

Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Credit Rate Max Credit (1 Child) Max Credit (2+ Children)
Under $15,00035%$1,050$2,100
$15,001 โ€“ $17,00034%$1,020$2,040
$17,001 โ€“ $19,00033%$990$1,980
$19,001 โ€“ $21,00032%$960$1,920
$21,001 โ€“ $23,00031%$930$1,860
$23,001 โ€“ $25,00030%$900$1,800
$25,001 โ€“ $27,00029%$870$1,740
$27,001 โ€“ $29,00028%$840$1,680
$29,001 โ€“ $31,00027%$810$1,620
$31,001 โ€“ $33,00026%$780$1,560
$33,001 โ€“ $35,00025%$750$1,500
$35,001 โ€“ $37,00024%$720$1,440
$37,001 โ€“ $39,00023%$690$1,380
$39,001 โ€“ $41,00022%$660$1,320
$41,001 โ€“ $43,00021%$630$1,260
Over $43,00020%$600$1,200

FSA interaction: If you contribute to a Dependent Care FSA through your employer, you must reduce your eligible expenses by the FSA amount. Example: $5,000 FSA + 2 children + $10,000 in childcare = $1,000 eligible for the credit (not $6,000). The $1,000 remaining eligible expense generates a $200 credit at 20% rate.

How to Claim the Credit: Step-by-Step

Earned Income Limit

Your eligible childcare expenses cannot exceed the smaller of:

This rarely affects most working families, but it can matter if one spouse earned very little income during the year. Full-time students and disabled spouses are treated as having $250/month ($500/month for 2+ qualifying persons) in deemed earned income for each month they are in school or disabled.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1

Forgetting to subtract the FSA amount

If you have a $5,000 FSA and claim $6,000 in expenses, you can only apply the credit to $1,000 โ€” not $6,000. Many families miss this and claim more than they're entitled to, which can trigger an IRS notice.

Mistake 2

Not having the provider's EIN

You must enter a TIN on Form 2441. If your provider refuses to give their EIN, you can file a "due diligence" explanation, but you may lose the credit. Always ask for the EIN before year-end.

Mistake 3

Claiming expenses above the cap

Even if you paid $15,000 in daycare costs, the credit is capped at $3,000 (1 child) or $6,000 (2+ children) in eligible expenses. Claiming more is an error the IRS will catch.

Mistake 4

Claiming the credit if you're married filing separately

In almost all cases, you cannot claim this credit if you file a separate return from your spouse. There is a narrow exception for legally separated spouses living apart โ€” see IRS Publication 503.

Mistake 5

Including overnight camp or school tuition

Day camps qualify; overnight camps do not. K-12 private school tuition does not qualify. Summer day programs at schools can qualify if they are care-focused rather than educational.

Mistake 6

Forgetting the Georgia state credit

Once you claim the federal credit, you're also entitled to a Georgia state credit worth 30% of your federal credit. Many families miss this bonus credit when they file their state return.

Important: The federal Child and Dependent Care Credit is non-refundable for most taxpayers in 2026. This means it can reduce your tax to zero but will not generate a refund if the credit exceeds your tax liability. Lower-income families should check whether the Georgia credit offers additional refundable benefits.

Useful IRS Resources