Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jul, 2016 01:08 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government's new child benefit will arrive in bank accounts and mailboxes starting Wednesday, and replaces the universal child care benefit, the Canada child tax benefit and the national child benefit supplement.
     
    Here are three things to know about the new program: 
     
     
    1) If you already receive the universal child care benefit, or the child tax benefit, you don't need to apply for the new one. Your information is already on file and all you have to do is file your 2015 tax return.
     
    Payments will be made by direct deposit if you're signed up for it, or by cheque if that is how you received the universal child care benefit around the 20th of each month.
     
    2) The new child benefit won't count as income, meaning it won't count against your tax return next year and be taxed like the previous universal child care benefit. Provinces have also said they won't count the new money when calculating income-tested benefits like rent and child care supplements.
     
     
     
    3) How much you receive is based on two things: the number of children under age 18 in your household and your net family income. Families with a net income of less than $30,000 receive the full benefit of $533 per month for a child under six and $450 per month for children six to 17. Benefit levels drop as income rises. 
     
    Most families, on average, will receive about $191 per month. An extra $227 per month is added for a child who qualifies for a disability payment.
     
    A LOOK BY PROVINCE AT THE ANTI-POVERTY EFFECTS OF THE NEW CHILD BENEFIT
     
    OTTAWA — The federal government's new child benefit that rolls out this week is expected to lift almost 300,000 children out of poverty by 2017.
     
    That's being measured by looking at how many children will, as a result, be living above the income threshold the government uses to determine who lives in poverty.
     
    Here's a breakdown by age and province of the percentage and number of children the government says will be living above the low-income cut off, or LICO.
     
    The numbers don't include the territories or aboriginal children living on reserve.
     
     
     
    All children to be lifted above LICO
     
    Newfoundland and Labrador: 8,900 (37%)
     
    Prince Edward Island: 600 (26%)
     
    Nova Scotia: 10,500 (40%)
     
    New Brunswick: 9,400 (37%)
     
    Quebec: 60,300 (48%)
     
    Ontario: 107,900 (38%)
     
    Manitoba: 21,000 (52%)
     
    Saskatchewan: 3,200 (12%)
     
    Alberta: 46,000 (42%)
     
    British Columbia: 16,100 (17%)
     
    Children age 0-5 lifted above LICO
     
    Newfoundland and Labrador: 2,000 (22%)
     
    Prince Edward Island: 0 (0%)
     
    Nova Scotia: 6,300 (59%)
     
    New Brunswick: 1,500 (21%)
     
    Quebec: 20,300 (56%)
     
    Ontario: 24,200 (24%)
     
    Manitoba: 8,500 (61%)
     
    Saskatchewan: 2,400 (24%)
     
    Alberta: 28,200 (52%)
     
    British Columbia: 8,200 (19%)
     
    Children 6-17 lifted above LICO
     
    Newfoundland and Labrador: 6,900 (46%)
     
    Prince Edward Island: 600 (43%)
     
    Nova Scotia: 4,100 (26%)
     
    New Brunswick: 7,800 (43%)
     
    Quebec: 40,000 (45%)
     
    Ontario: 83,700 (46%)
     
    Manitoba: 12,500 (47%)
     
    Saskatchewan: 800 (4%)
     
    Alberta: 17,800 (32%)
     
    British Columbia: 7,900 (15%)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sentencing Hearing For Gordon Stuckless On 100 Sex Abuse Convictions To Begin Wednesday

    Gordon Stuckless pleaded guilty in 2014 to 100 charges related to the sexual abuse of 18 boys decades ago.

    Sentencing Hearing For Gordon Stuckless On 100 Sex Abuse Convictions To Begin Wednesday

    Mom Delays Cancer Care To Protect Baby She Says Saved Her

    Mom Delays Cancer Care To Protect Baby She Says Saved Her
     For Kim Vaillancourt, pregnant while staving off aggressive brain cancer, it comes down to this: "The baby saved me. Now it's my turn to save him."

    Mom Delays Cancer Care To Protect Baby She Says Saved Her

    Dion Digs At Tories With New Foreign Policy Label: Responsible Conviction

    Dion Digs At Tories With New Foreign Policy Label: Responsible Conviction
    Dion says it is the guiding principle for the new directions the Liberal government has adopted towards the world.

    Dion Digs At Tories With New Foreign Policy Label: Responsible Conviction

    Activists Want Canada To Push For Nuclear-Free World Despite Stephane Dion's Reticence

    Activists Want Canada To Push For Nuclear-Free World Despite Stephane Dion's Reticence
    Anti-nuclear campaigners who want Canada to push for a global ban on nuclear weapons are concerned that Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion is showing a definite lack of enthusiasm for that goal.

    Activists Want Canada To Push For Nuclear-Free World Despite Stephane Dion's Reticence

    Union Heads Pen Joint Statement In Support Tom Mulcair Ahead Of Leadership Vote

    In a statement released Tuesday, the labour leaders say Mulcair has proven his ability to provide a "true progressive" alternative to the Liberal government.

    Union Heads Pen Joint Statement In Support Tom Mulcair Ahead Of Leadership Vote

    New Confusion Over Name Of 'black Widow' Convicted In Poisoning, Death Of Men

    New Confusion Over Name Of 'black Widow' Convicted In Poisoning, Death Of Men
    An elderly woman whose identity shifted before and after convictions for killing and poisoning men is once again at the centre of confusion over what her last name truly is.

    New Confusion Over Name Of 'black Widow' Convicted In Poisoning, Death Of Men