Tuition Tax Credit 2026
The tuition tax credit is a non-refundable tax credit that reduces your taxes payable. It’s based on eligible tuition fees paid to qualifying educational institutions.
How the Credit Works
| Credit Type | Rate | Example ($10,000 tuition) |
|---|---|---|
| Federal credit | 15% | $1,500 |
| Provincial credit | 5-10% | $500-$1,000 |
| Total credit | 20-25% | $2,000-$2,500 |
The credit is non-refundable, meaning it can only reduce taxes owed to $0 — you won’t receive a refund if the credit exceeds your taxes.
Provincial Tuition Tax Credit Rates
| Province | Rate | Credit on $10,000 |
|---|---|---|
| ON | 5.05% | $505 |
| BC | 5.06% | $506 |
| AB | 10% | $1,000 |
| SK | 10.5% | $1,050 |
| MB | 10.8% | $1,080 |
| QC | 8% (tuition credit) | $800 |
| NS | 8.79% | $879 |
| NB | 9.40% | $940 |
| NL | 8.7% | $870 |
| PE | 9.8% | $980 |
Eligible Tuition Fees
Qualifies as Tuition
- University tuition
- College tuition
- Trade school fees
- Qualifying occupational courses
- Ancillary fees (if mandatory)
- Examination fees for professional designations
Does NOT Qualify
- Student association fees
- Health and dental plan fees
- Parking
- Residence and meals
- Books and supplies
- Transportation
- Tutoring
Calculating Your Credit
Example: Full-Time Student
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Tuition paid | $8,000 |
| Federal credit (15%) | $1,200 |
| Provincial credit (ON 5.05%) | $404 |
| Total tax reduction | $1,604 |
Minimum Threshold
You must pay at least $100 in eligible tuition to claim the credit. Fees under $100 don’t qualify.
T2202 Form
Your educational institution provides Form T2202 (Tuition and Enrolment Certificate) by the end of February. It shows:
| Box | Description |
|---|---|
| A | Eligible tuition fees |
| B | Part-time months |
| C | Full-time months |
Enter amounts from your T2202 on Schedule 11 of your tax return.
Using, Transferring, or Carrying Forward
You have three options for your tuition tax credit:
Option 1: Use It Yourself
Use the credit to reduce your current year’s taxes to $0. This is the default — credits are applied to your own return first.
Option 2: Transfer to a Family Member
Transfer up to $5,000 of unused federal credits to:
- Parent or grandparent
- Spouse or common-law partner
Transfer calculation: Maximum transfer = $5,000 – credits you used yourself
Example:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total tuition | $8,000 |
| Your taxes payable | $500 |
| Credits used by you | $3,333 (to reduce taxes to $0) |
| Available for transfer | $4,667 |
| Maximum transfer | $4,667 (under $5,000 limit) |
Option 3: Carry Forward
Any unused credits carry forward indefinitely. Use them in future years when you have taxes payable.
Best strategy: Carry forward is usually better than transferring, because:
- No limit on carry forward amount
- You’ll likely be in a higher tax bracket after graduation
- The credit will be worth more to you later
Provincial Differences
Ontario
- 5.05% provincial credit rate
- Up to $5,000 can be transferred
- Unlimited carry forward
Quebec
- Uses a different system (tuition credit + RL-8 form)
- 8% on tuition paid
- Different transfer rules apply
Alberta
- 10% provincial credit rate
- Higher provincial benefit than most provinces
Students Living Abroad
Tuition paid to qualifying foreign universities may be eligible if:
- You are a Canadian resident
- The program is at least 3 consecutive weeks
- It leads to a degree
- The institution is on CRA’s designated list
Professional Exam Fees
Fees for licensing/certification exams may qualify if:
- Required for professional status
- Not employment-related training
- The institution is CRA-designated
Qualifying examples:
- CPA exam fees
- Bar admission exams
- Medical licensing exams
Common Mistakes
- Not claiming all fees – Include mandatory ancillary fees
- Forgetting carry-forwards – Check previous years’ unused amounts on your Notice of Assessment
- Transferring when you shouldn’t – Keep the credit if you’ll earn more later
- Missing provincial credits – Both federal and provincial credits apply
- Not requesting T2202 – Contact your school if you haven’t received it
How to Claim
- Get your T2202 from your school (or CRA My Account)
- Complete Schedule 11 (Federal Tuition, Education, and Textbook Amounts)
- If transferring, complete the transfer section and have the recipient claim it
- Provincial schedule varies by province