CloverMap is an independent family resource, not affiliated with the IRS, Georgia Department of Revenue, or any government agency. The information on this page is for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for advice from a licensed CPA or tax professional. Tax laws can change — always verify current limits and rules with a qualified tax advisor or IRS Publication 503.
Three Ways to Reduce Your Childcare Bill
The federal tax code and Georgia state law offer three distinct mechanisms to lower what you actually pay for daycare, preschool, or after-school care. Each works differently, and they interact with each other — so the order you use them matters.
Federal Child & Dependent Care Credit
A federal tax credit worth 20–35% of up to $3,000 (1 child) or $6,000 (2+ children) in childcare expenses. Claimed on IRS Form 2441.
Dependent Care FSA
Pre-tax payroll deduction of up to $5,000/year. Saves you income tax + FICA (7.65%) on every dollar contributed. Available through many employers.
Georgia State Childcare Credit
Georgia offers an additional credit equal to 30% of your federal credit, claimed on Georgia Form 500. Partially refundable for lower-income families.
Tax Savings Calculator
Enter your income, childcare costs, and FSA access to get a personalized estimate of all three savings combined.
How the Three Benefits Work Together
Understanding how these benefits interact is critical — especially the FSA and federal credit, which share an expense pool. Here's the big picture:
| Benefit | 2026 Max Value | How You Claim It | Income Phase-Out? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent Care FSA | $1,482 in tax savings (on $5,000 contribution, 22% bracket) | Via employer payroll during Open Enrollment | No — same limit regardless of income |
| Federal Child & Dependent Care Credit | $600 (1 child) to $1,200 (2+ children) | IRS Form 2441 on your federal tax return | Yes — credit rate drops from 35% to 20% above $43,000 AGI |
| Georgia State Childcare Credit | 30% of your federal credit (up to ~$360) | Georgia Form 500, Schedule 2 | Follows the federal credit phase-out |
Key interaction rule: If you use a Dependent Care FSA, you must subtract that amount from the eligible expenses for the federal credit. Example: $5,000 FSA + $6,000 childcare expenses = only $1,000 left eligible for the federal credit (for 2 children). This is why stacking order matters.
Which Should You Use First? The Right Order
Because the FSA and federal credit both reduce your taxable childcare expenses, you need to be strategic about how you use them. Here's the recommended sequence:
Recommended Strategy for Most Georgia Families
Who Qualifies?
To claim any of these childcare tax benefits, you generally must meet these requirements:
- The child must be under age 13 at the time care was provided
- You (and your spouse, if married) must have earned income during the year
- The care must enable you (and your spouse) to work or look for work
- The childcare provider cannot be your spouse, the child's parent, or a dependent you claim
- You must have a qualifying daycare center, preschool, or individual provider
Note for stay-at-home parents: Generally, you cannot claim these credits if one spouse does not have earned income. However, there are exceptions for full-time students and those temporarily disabled — see IRS Publication 503 for details.
5 Common Mistakes Georgia Families Make
Without your provider's EIN, you can't file Form 2441. Ask at enrollment — don't wait until tax season when the office may be hard to reach.
FSA enrollment is once a year, typically in November. If you miss it, you lose the entire year's benefit — up to $1,482 in tax savings. Set a calendar reminder.
Many families claim the federal credit but forget to also claim Georgia's 30% add-on on Form 500. It's automatic once you have the federal credit — there's no extra work required.
Both spouses must have earned income (with limited exceptions). A working parent married to a full-time stay-at-home parent generally cannot claim the credit.
The IRS requires you to subtract FSA contributions from your eligible credit expenses. Using $5,000 FSA means only $1,000 of a 2-child credit base remains. Getting this wrong can trigger an audit.
What Types of Care Qualify?
A wider range of childcare arrangements qualify than many families realize:
- Licensed daycare centers and preschools (including Georgia DECAL-licensed facilities)
- In-home childcare providers (nannies, babysitters, au pairs)
- After-school care programs
- Summer day camps (day camps qualify; overnight camps do not)
- Before-school care programs
- Pre-K programs (if they are primarily childcare, not education)
Care that does not qualify includes overnight camps, tutoring, private school tuition for kindergarten and above, and care provided by a dependent you claim on your return.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a Dependent Care FSA AND claim the tax credit?
Yes — but they share the same expense pool. If you contribute $5,000 to an FSA and have $6,000 in qualifying childcare costs (2 children), only $1,000 remains eligible for the federal credit. You can't double-count the same dollars for both benefits.
What if my employer doesn't offer a Dependent Care FSA?
You can't open an FSA on your own — it must be employer-sponsored. However, self-employed individuals may be able to deduct childcare costs differently. If your employer doesn't offer one, focus on maximizing the federal Child and Dependent Care Credit and the Georgia state credit instead.
Does my daycare have to give me their EIN?
Yes. Childcare providers are legally required to provide their Employer Identification Number (EIN) or Social Security Number when requested. You need this to complete IRS Form 2441. Ask your daycare director — this is a routine request they handle every tax season.
Do summer camps qualify for the childcare credit?
Day camps qualify. Overnight camps do not. The camp must primarily enable you to work or look for work, and your child must be under age 13 when the care is provided.
What if one spouse doesn't work?
Generally both spouses must have earned income to claim the credit. There are exceptions for full-time students and those who are disabled. See IRS Publication 503 for details. This rule catches many stay-at-home parent households off guard — it applies even if the non-working spouse looks for work.
Calculate Your Exact Savings
Enter your income, childcare costs, and filing details to see your personalized estimate for all three benefits combined.
Open the Tax Savings Calculator →