Education expenses have multiple treatment options in Canada depending on who paid, what type of education it is, and your employment status. Here is a clear guide to every category.
Category 1: Post-secondary tuition — the tuition tax credit
What it is
The tuition tax credit (Line 32300 of your T1) is a 15% non-refundable federal tax credit for eligible tuition fees at a post-secondary level. It is a credit, not a deduction — it directly reduces federal tax owing rather than reducing taxable income.
What qualifies
- Tuition at a Canadian university, college, CEGEP, or other certified post-secondary institution
- Tuition at a foreign university where you were enrolled in a course lasting at least 3 consecutive weeks and leading to a degree
- Courses at a Canadian institution costing at least $100 — including part-time courses
- Professional training at certain certified educational institutions
What does NOT qualify
- Ancillary fees: student union fees, athletic fees, building levies
- Accommodation and living expenses
- Textbooks and supplies (the textbook credit was eliminated federally after 2017)
- Courses that are not for credit or certification
How to claim
Your institution issues a T2202 slip (Tuition and Enrolment Certificate) showing your eligible fees. Enter the amount on Line 32300.
Carry-forward and transfer rules
If your tuition credit exceeds your federal tax for the year:
- Carry it forward to a future year (indefinitely)
- Transfer up to $5,000 to a supporting parent, grandparent, or spouse who can use the credit in the current year
Category 2: The Canada Training Credit (CTC)
The Canada Training Credit is a newer refundable credit specifically for adult training costs. Unlike the tuition credit, unused CTC is refunded to you even if your tax owing is zero.
How the CTC accumulates
- Every year you are between 25 and 65 (at year-end), and have at least $10,000 of working income, and filed a return, you accumulate $250 of CTC room (up to a lifetime cap of $5,000)
- Your accumulated CTC limit appears on your Notice of Assessment
How to claim
Claim 50% of eligible tuition and fees at a certified institution, up to your accumulated CTC limit, on Line 45350. The credit is refundable.
Example: You have $800 in accumulated CTC room and spend $1,400 on an eligible course. You can claim 50% of $1,400 = $700 (less than your $800 limit). You receive a $700 refundable credit and your CTC limit is reduced by $700.
Category 3: Employer-paid education benefits
If your employer pays for your education or training:
- If training is primarily for your employer’s benefit (e.g., company-required courses, software training for your role): the benefit is generally non-taxable — it does not go on your T4 and you cannot also claim a deduction
- If training is for your personal career advancement (general degree that benefits you beyond this job): CRA may consider it a taxable benefit to be included in your income
Employee training and T2200
In rare cases, if an employer requires an employee to take a course as a condition of employment and the employee pays out of pocket, the cost may be deductible as an employment expense under T2200. This is uncommon — most training is either employer-paid or voluntary.
Category 4: Self-employed professional development
If you are self-employed, training and professional development costs are deductible as business expenses on Form T2125, provided:
- The training maintains or improves skills in your current field of business (not a new career)
- It is directly related to your income-earning activities
- The cost is reasonable
Examples that generally qualify:
- A freelance graphic designer taking an advanced software course
- A plumber attending a code update seminar
- A coach taking continuing education required to maintain certification
Examples that generally do NOT qualify:
- An accountant taking a cooking course for personal interest
- A self-employed tradesperson paying for university to enter a different profession
- Online courses for general life skill improvement
Category 5: Professional designation fees and dues
Annual fees paid to a professional regulatory body as a condition of employment or business are fully deductible on Line 21200 (professional and union dues), without the 15% credit limitation:
- CPA annual dues
- Law society fees
- Nursing association fees
- APEG (engineering) fees
- Medical licensing fees
This is a deduction from income (better than a credit) and is typically worth more dollar-for-dollar than the tuition credit.
Summary: which category applies to you?
| Situation | Category | Claim |
|---|---|---|
| University or college tuition | Tuition credit | Line 32300 (T2202 required) |
| Eligible adult training course | Canada Training Credit | Line 45350 |
| Employer paid for required job training | Not claimable (non-taxable benefit) | — |
| Self-employed: courses in current field | Business expense | T2125 |
| Professional dues required for work | Employment/business deduction | Line 21200 |
| Courses for a new career | Not deductible | — |
Related resources
- Can I Deduct Subscriptions on Taxes Canada? — Professional memberships and digital tools
- Can I Deduct Childcare on Taxes Canada? — If training requires childcare costs
- Self-Employed Tax Guide Canada — Business expense rules including professional development
- T2202 Tuition Slip Explained — Understanding your tuition slip