Baby bonus calculator · $80,000 income

Baby bonus for $80,000 income in Canada (2026)

Pre-set to $80,000 household income. Adjust the kid count and province to see the exact Canada Child Benefit deposit, plus provincial supplement and CGEB. The most common household income band in Canada. CCB Tier 1 phase-out applies with the highest per-RRSP-dollar recovery.

$75,000/year

Combined for both parents if both work. Just one parent's income if one's at home.

Any kids under 6?

Under-6 kids get more CCB ($8,157/yr vs $6,883/yr).

Your family gets

$840

tax-free per month

That's $10,077 tax-free per year — in your account, untouched by tax. (13% of your household income.)

The breakdown

  • $839.75/month — Canada Child Benefit$10,077/yr

The single-income reality check

If one parent stayed home with the kids — here's how the math changes.

Two incomes today

$5,972/mo

After tax + benefits − daycare.
Daycare for 1 kid under 6 costs about $5,016/yr in Ontario.

One parent at home

$6,229/mo

After tax + benefits. No daycare bill. Spousal tax credit kicks in (~$2,300 federal saved).

One income comes out $257/month ahead.

That's $3,080more per year in the family budget — before any quality-of-life math. The benefits don't change (same household income, same AFNI). What changes: the tax bracket walks differently for a single earner, the spousal credit appears, and daycare disappears as a line item.

Assumes 60/40 split for two-income, married couple, all kids under 6 attend daycare in the two-income scenario. Open the advanced calculator for exact numbers, RRSP impact, second-income breakeven for your specific wage.

What a family at $80,000 receives by province

The same 2-kid family at $80,000 household income receives different total tax-free transfers depending on the province. Below is the 2026-27 math for a 2-kid family with at least one kid under 6:

  • Ontario: $9,402/year ($783/month) — CCB $9,402 + Ontario Child Benefit $0 + CGEB $0
  • Quebec: $14,220/year ($1,185/month) — CCB $9,402 + Allocation famille (Québec) $4,818 + CGEB $0
  • British Columbia: $11,222/year ($935/month) — CCB $9,402 + BC Family Benefit $1,820 + CGEB $0
  • Alberta: $9,900/year ($825/month) — CCB $9,402 + Alberta Child and Family Benefit $499 + CGEB $0

Quebec almost always pays the most generous total federal + provincial transfer because the Quebec Family Allowance is the most generous provincial child benefit in Canada. Ontario pays the OCB, which is meaningful at low-to-middle income. BC and Alberta provincial supplements taper faster.

The CCB phase-out math at $80,000

For the 2026-27 benefit year, CCB starts at the per-kid max and phases out as AFNI rises. At $80,000 AFNI, the phase-out is in the Tier 1 range — 7-23% per dollar above $38,237 depending on kid count.

For a 2-kid family the Tier 1 rate is 13.5% per dollar. For 3 kids it's 19%. For 4+ kids it's 23%. Bigger families recover more per dollar of RRSP contribution (the RRSP + CCB lever). See the RRSP + CCB page for the full math.

The single-income case at $80,000

For a $80,000 household, the single-income vs two-income comparison usually breaks in favour of single-income for families with kids under 6 in daycare-required provinces (ON, BC, NS, NB). The calculator above runs the exact comparison for your specific province and kid count.

The structural reasons: a single-income household keeps the CCB amount that a dual-income household would lose to the phase-out (because the AFNI is the same but the marginal-tax-bracket walk + spousal credit work in favour of the single earner). Plus daycare is avoided entirely. See the single-income vs two-income page for the full breakdown.

Frequently asked questions

How much CCB does a family at $80,000 household income get in Canada in 2026?

A 2-kid Ontario family at $80,000 household income receives about $9,402/year tax-free in combined Canada Child Benefit, Ontario Child Benefit, and CGEB. Quebec pays $14,220, BC $11,222, Alberta $9,900. The most common household income band in Canada. CCB Tier 1 phase-out applies with the highest per-RRSP-dollar recovery.

Is $80,000 considered low, middle, or high income in Canada?

$80,000 household income is in the middle-income Canadian families category. Statistics Canada's median household income is around $90,000-$100,000 for couple families. Households below $50,000 are typically considered low income; $50,000-$100,000 middle income; above $100,000 upper-middle to high income.

Can a family on $80,000 live on one income with kids in Canada?

Most middle-income Canadian single-income families with $80,000 of household income manage well outside the highest-cost markets (GTA, Vancouver, Victoria). The single-income reality check in the calculator above runs the exact math — single income often comes out within a few hundred dollars per month of two-income at this bracket, because daycare is avoided and the spousal credit kicks in.

Other income brackets