Updated March 12, 2026H1B TaxFile Editorial

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Child and Dependent Care Credit for H-1B Holders (Form 2441)

If you paid for daycare, preschool, a nanny, or after-school care so that both you and your spouse could work, you may be eligible for the Child and Dependent Care Credit. For H-1B families with young children in the U.S., this credit can reduce your tax bill by up to $2,100 per year (for two or more qualifying persons). The rules around the "both spouses must work" requirement have specific implications for families where one spouse is on an H-4 visa — the details matter.

H-4 spouse: you must have earned income or qualifying status

  • The credit generally requires both spouses to have earned income during the year. An H-4 spouse with no work authorization and no income does not automatically disqualify the credit — a spouse who is a full-time student or who is incapable of self-care is treated as having earned $250/month (one qualifying person) or $500/month (two or more qualifying persons) of earned income for purposes of this credit.
  • An H-4 spouse with an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) who worked during the year has actual earned income and fully satisfies the requirement.

What Is the Child and Dependent Care Credit?

The Child and Dependent Care Credit (CDCC) is a federal tax credit for work-related expenses paid to care for a qualifying person so that you and your spouse could work or look for work. It is claimed on Form 2441 and flows to Schedule 3 of your Form 1040.

Unlike a deduction (which reduces taxable income), this is a credit — it directly reduces your tax bill dollar for dollar, subject to the limits below. The credit is non-refundable under normal law, meaning it can reduce your tax to zero but will not generate a refund beyond that. (In some years, Congress makes it temporarily refundable, as in 2021; check current-year rules.)

Who Qualifies

The Qualifying Person

Care expenses must be for a qualifying person, which means:

  • A dependent child under age 13 whom you are entitled to claim as a dependent (or would be entitled to claim but for a custody agreement transferring the exemption to the other parent)
  • Your spouse who was physically or mentally incapable of self-care and lived with you for more than half the year
  • Any other person who was your dependent and physically or mentally incapable of self-care and lived with you for more than half the year

The most common situation for H-1B families is a child under 13. Note the age: care expenses for a 13-year-old do not qualify (unless the child is incapable of self-care), even if the child needs after-school supervision.

The Work Requirement

Both you and your spouse must have earned income during the year, or one of you must be a full-time student or incapable of self-care. Earned income includes wages, salaries, self-employment income, and net earnings from a business — it does not include investment income, Indian bank interest, or EPF income.

Special rule for full-time students: a spouse who was a full-time student for at least 5 months during the year is treated as having earned income of $250/month (for one qualifying person) or $500/month (for two or more qualifying persons) for each month they were a student. This allows H-1B families where the H-4 spouse is a full-time graduate student to still claim the credit.

Expense Limits and Credit Rate

There are two limits at play: the expense limit (how much of your spending counts) and the credit rate (what percentage of that spending becomes your credit).

Expense Limits

Number of Qualifying PersonsMaximum Qualifying Expenses
1 qualifying person$3,000
2 or more qualifying persons$6,000

These limits are on qualifying expenses, not on what you actually paid. If you paid $15,000 in daycare for two children, only $6,000 of that feeds into the credit calculation. You also cannot count more expenses than the earned income of the lower-earning spouse. If your spouse worked part-time and earned $2,000 during the year, the qualifying expenses are capped at $2,000 regardless of what you actually paid.

Credit Rate

The credit rate ranges from 20% to 35% of qualifying expenses, based on your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI):

AGICredit Rate
$15,000 or less35%
$15,001 – $43,000Decreases 1% per $2,000 above $15,000
$43,001 and above20% (flat)

Most H-1B families in tech roles will have AGI well above $43,000, so the credit rate will be 20%. For one child, the maximum credit works out to $3,000 × 20% = $600. For two or more children, $6,000 × 20% = $1,200. In a 2021-type scenario (temporarily refundable with 50% rate), these numbers were significantly higher. Under normal law, the numbers above apply.

Maximum credit under normal law: $600 (1 child) or $1,200 (2+ children) for most H-1B households with AGI above $43,000.

Qualifying Care Expenses

The expenses must be for care, not for education — though the line blurs for young children:

  • Qualifying: Daycare centers, licensed home daycare providers, au pairs (the care portion of their costs), nannies, babysitters, preschool (the care component), before-school and after-school care programs, and summer day camps.
  • Not qualifying: Overnight camps, tuition for kindergarten and above, food, clothing, or entertainment costs of a dependent, and care provided by your spouse, the child's other parent, or a dependent you claim on your return.

For preschool: if the primary purpose is custodial care (rather than education), the cost qualifies. A Montessori preschool for a 3-year-old is generally treated as qualifying care. Kindergarten is not qualifying — it is a grade of school.

Summer day camps qualify, even if the camp has an educational component. Overnight camps (sleepaway camps) do not qualify, because the overnight portion is not work-related custodial care in the IRS's view.

Employer Dependent Care FSA Coordination

Many employers offer a Dependent Care Flexible Spending Account (FSA) under IRC Section 129. You can contribute up to $5,000 per year pre-tax ($2,500 if MFS) through payroll deductions. This amount is excluded from your W-2 wages and shown in Box 10 of your W-2.

The interaction with the CDCC on Form 2441: your qualifying expense limit ($3,000 or $6,000) is reduced by the amount excluded from income through a Dependent Care FSA. This is Form 2441 Part III, and it is where many filers make mistakes.

Example with two children:

Total daycare paid: $18,000
Employer FSA exclusion (Box 10, W-2): $5,000
Maximum qualifying expenses (2 persons): $6,000
Reduced by FSA: $6,000 − $5,000 = $1,000
Credit at 20%: $1,000 × 20% = $200

In this example, the Dependent Care FSA already delivered most of the benefit — $5,000 excluded from income at your marginal rate (say, 24%) saves you $1,200 in taxes. The CDCC provides a modest additional $200. Together, the total benefit from childcare costs is about $1,400.

The key insight: the FSA and the CDCC are not additive up to their separate limits. They share the $6,000 expense ceiling (for two children). Maximizing the FSA at $5,000 leaves only $1,000 for the CDCC. You cannot claim $5,000 FSA plus $6,000 CDCC for a total of $11,000 in benefits.

H-1B-Specific Considerations

H-4 Spouse Without EAD

If your H-4 spouse has no Employment Authorization Document and did not work, they have no earned income. However, if they were a full-time student for at least 5 months during the year, the IRS treats them as having $250/month (one qualifying person) or $500/month (two+ qualifying persons) of earned income for those months. A full-time student for all 12 months would be treated as having $3,000 (one child) or $6,000 (two+ children) of earned income — enough to satisfy the limit.

If the H-4 spouse neither worked nor attended school, and is not incapable of self-care, you cannot claim the CDCC. The IRS requires the non-working spouse to have been a student or incapable of caring for themselves.

Qualifying Persons Must Live With You

The qualifying person — typically your child — must have lived with you for more than half the year. Children who are in India for most of the year and visit the U.S. briefly do not qualify. This is relevant for H-1B families in early years where children may remain in India with grandparents while the parents establish themselves.

Care Provider Must Have a Tax ID

On Form 2441, you must provide the care provider's name, address, and taxpayer identification number (SSN, ITIN, or EIN). If the provider refuses to give you their TIN, you are still eligible for the credit but must provide documentation of your attempt to obtain the information. Paying a nanny in cash without tracking their identity creates problems here — you should have a signed Form W-10 from each care provider.

Common Mistakes

  1. Claiming expenses for a child who was in India. The child must have lived with you in the U.S. for more than half the year. Care expenses for a child who spent most of the year in India with grandparents do not qualify.
  2. Not reducing qualifying expenses by the Dependent Care FSA. Form 2441 Part III requires you to reduce the expense limit by the Box 10 amount from your W-2. Ignoring this step overstates your credit and can trigger an IRS notice.
  3. Assuming the H-4 spouse automatically disqualifies the credit. A full-time student H-4 spouse satisfies the earned income requirement. Many H-1B families miss this credit because they incorrectly assume both spouses need wage income.
  4. Including overnight camp expenses. Sleepaway camps are not qualifying care expenses. Only day camps qualify.
  5. Not collecting the care provider's TIN. Form 2441 requires the provider's name, address, and TIN. If you cannot get it, the credit is still technically available but requires a specific entry documenting your attempt — leaving the field blank is not acceptable.

How Our Platform Handles This

H1B TaxFile includes the dependent care credit in the credits step of the filing wizard. You enter:

  • Each qualifying person (name, SSN/ITIN, date of birth)
  • Care provider information (name, address, TIN)
  • Total expenses paid to each provider
  • The Box 10 amount from your W-2 (Dependent Care FSA exclusion)
  • Your spouse's earned income or student status

The engine performs the Form 2441 Part III calculation, prorates for the FSA exclusion, applies the correct credit rate based on your AGI, and limits qualifying expenses to the earned income of the lower-earning spouse. Form 2441 is generated and included in your PDF return.

Related guide: Child Tax Credit and ITIN Dependents

Frequently Asked Questions

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H1B TaxFile Team

Written by the H1B TaxFile editorial team — tax professionals and software engineers who specialize in U.S. federal tax filing for H-1B visa holders, F-1 students, and nonresident aliens.

Reviewed by a licensed CPA with international tax experience.

Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.

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