Real Case: Family With 3 Kids Gets Full CCB Benefits

A real-life example of how a Canadian family with three children qualified for maximum Canada Child Benefit (CCB) payments. Learn how income, deductions, and smart tax filing helped them maximize benefits.

11/20/20252 phút đọc

Many families don’t realize how much the Canada Child Benefit (CCB) can support their household—and even fewer know how to maximize it. This real case study shows how one family with three kids increased their CCB to the full amount simply by filing taxes correctly and using deductions they were already eligible for.

This example is based on real situations commonly seen by tax professionals across Canada.

1. The Family’s Situation

A married couple living in Canada with:

  • 3 children (ages 2, 6, and 9)

  • Both parents working full-time

  • Household income appearing “too high” at first glance

Before filing correctly, they were only receiving partial CCB, and they assumed they were not eligible for more.

But the issue wasn’t eligibility—it was how they filed their taxes.

2. The Problem: Income Was Reported Higher Than Necessary

The family didn’t claim:

  • Childcare expenses

  • Medical receipts

  • RRSP contributions

  • Work-from-home deductions

  • Employment expenses

  • Disability-related credits for one child (mild ADHD, officially documented)

Because these were missing, their net family income (the number CRA uses to calculate CCB) looked much higher than it truly was.

As a result, the CRA reduced their CCB.

3. What We Did to Fix Their CCB

By carefully reviewing their year, we uncovered deductions and credits that legally lowered their net income without changing their lifestyle.

Here’s what they were able to claim:

  • $16,000 in daycare and after-school care

  • $3,800 in medical expenses

  • $1,200 in charitable donations

  • $9,000 in RRSP contributions

  • Disability Tax Credit (DTC) for one child

  • $2/day work-from-home deduction for both parents

  • Union dues & work expenses

These deductions significantly reduced their adjusted family net income, which the CRA uses to determine CCB eligibility.

4. The Result: Full CCB Benefits Restored

After adjusting and re-filing correctly:

The family saw:

  • Full CCB amounts for all 3 kids

  • Retroactive payments for previous years

  • Higher monthly CCB going forward

Their retroactive payment alone covered several months of household expenses.

5. Why This Case Matters

Most families think CCB is only for low-income households.
But the real factor is net family income after deductions—not gross income.

Families with:

  • Childcare expenses

  • Medical bills

  • RRSP contributions

  • Work expenses

  • Disability-related needs

…often qualify for far more than they realize.

This case proves that even middle-income or dual-income families can receive maximum CCB when they file strategically.

6. How You Can Maximize Your CCB Too

Here’s what every family should do:

✔ Collect all childcare and daycare receipts

These directly reduce the lower-income spouse's net income.

✔ Claim all medical, dental, therapy, and specialist costs

Many parents don’t know these add up quickly.

✔ Check if any child qualifies for the Disability Tax Credit

Even ADHD, learning disabilities, or autism assessments may qualify.

✔ Contribute to RRSPs

This directly reduces family net income and often increases CCB.

✔ Review past returns

You can request adjustments for up to 10 years.

Final Thoughts

This real case study shows a powerful truth:
Proper tax filing can dramatically increase your Canada Child Benefit.

If you have children, it is absolutely worth reviewing your tax situation—and even past tax years—to ensure you're not missing out on money the CRA intended for families like yours.

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