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What Is the CAIP Payment in Canada? (Climate Action Incentive)

Updated

If you received quarterly deposits labelled “CAIP” or “Canada Carbon Rebate” in your bank account, this guide explains exactly what the program was, how it worked, and its current status.

What CAIP was

The Climate Action Incentive Payment (CAIP) was a federal government direct deposit designed to return carbon pricing revenues to Canadian households. For every dollar collected through the federal fuel charge on gasoline, natural gas, and propane, a portion was returned directly to residents of the provinces where it was collected.

The theory: residents who change their behaviour (drive less, switch to heat pumps, use less gas) would receive more back than they paid in. Higher-income households who use more energy would pay more than they received.


Timeline: how CAIP evolved

Period How it worked Name
2018–2019 Claimed as a refundable credit on T1 return (Schedule 14) Climate Action Incentive
2020–2021 Still on tax return; amounts increased with rising carbon price Climate Action Incentive
July 2022 Changed to quarterly direct deposits; no longer claimed on return Climate Action Incentive Payment (CAIP)
April 2024 Rebranded only — same program, same rules Canada Carbon Rebate (CCR)
April 1, 2025 Federal consumer fuel charge eliminated; CCR discontinued

Which provinces received CAIP

CAIP applied where the federal backstop carbon pricing system was in effect. Provinces with CRA-approved provincial pricing systems were excluded.

Province Received CAIP? Notes
Ontario Yes Large population; most total CAIP dollars paid
Alberta Yes Highest per-person amounts (higher rural fuel use)
Saskatchewan Yes Among highest per-person amounts
Manitoba Yes
Nova Scotia Yes Added when provincial system deemed insufficient
New Brunswick Yes Added in 2023
PEI Yes Added in 2023
Newfoundland & Labrador Yes Added in 2023
British Columbia No Had own provincial carbon tax since 2008; received BC Climate Action Tax Credit instead
Quebec No Cap-and-trade system recognized federally
Territories Varied Different arrangements

How much was CAIP?

Amounts were paid per adult and per eligible child in the household. One parent in a single-parent household claimed the parent amount; the other was split between the two in a couple.

Annual per-household totals by province (2023–24 benefit year, base amount — not including rural supplement):

Province Adult Spouse/CLP Per child Family of 4 (2 adults, 2 kids)
Ontario $244 $122 $61 ~$488
Manitoba $264 $132 $66 ~$528
Saskatchewan $376 $188 $94 ~$752
Alberta $386 $193 $97 ~$772
Nova Scotia $248 $124 $62 ~$496
New Brunswick $184 $92 $46 ~$368
PEI $240 $120 $60 ~$480 (lump sum)
NL $298 $149 $74.5 ~$596

Rural residents supplement: 10% extra (increasing to 20% in some provinces). You qualified if your principal residence was outside a Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) or Census Agglomeration (CA) — essentially, rural and small-town residents.

Quarterly amounts: Divide annual total by 4.


How payments were delivered

From July 2022 onward, CAIP was a direct deposit (if registered with CRA) or cheque, paid quarterly:

  • April payment (January–March quarter)
  • July payment (April–June quarter)
  • October payment (July–September quarter)
  • January payment (October–December quarter)

The annual payment cycle ran April to January, with payment amounts based on the prior calendar year’s tax return.


CAIP in bank statements

CAIP deposits appeared in bank accounts as:

  • “CANADA-CAIP”
  • “CRA CAIP”
  • “CCR” (after the 2024 rebrand)
  • “Canada Carbon Rebate”

These were all the same program.


Differences from the Canada PRO deposit

CAIP / CCR Canada PRO
Federal or provincial? Federal program Provincial programs delivered by CRA
Who received it Backstop province residents ON (OTB), BC (BCCATC), AB (ACFB)
Deposit label “CANADA-CAIP” or “CCR” “Canada PRO”
Current status (2026) Discontinued April 2025 Ongoing (OTB, BCCATC, ACFB continue)

Current status (2025–2026)

The federal consumer carbon price (the fuel charge) was eliminated effective April 1, 2025 following the 2025 federal election. The CCR payments tied to the consumer fuel charge ended with the final 2024–25 benefit year payment.

As of April 2026:

  • No more CAIP/CCR quarterly deposits are being paid in any province
  • The industrial carbon price (for large emitters) remains in place
  • Provincial OTB, BCCATC, and ACFB (Canada PRO deposits) continue under separate legislation and are unaffected

If you are expecting a CAIP/CCR deposit after April 2025 and not receiving one, this is not an error — the program ended.