Coming soon: tax-free childcare

New tax-free scheme aims to help working parents with the cost of childcare. The new scheme will replace the current system of employer-supported childcare (ESC) which is offered by less than 5% of employers and used by around 450,000 families. All eligible parents will be able to join the scheme by the end of 2017.

Plans for the introduction of a
new scheme called ‘tax-free childcare’ were initially announced way back in the
2013 Budget. The original proposals have since been amended and the scheme is
now set to be implemented during 2017. Broadly, the new scheme, which aims to
help working parents with the cost of childcare, will replace the current
system of employer-supported childcare (ESC) which is offered by less than 5%
of employers and used by around 450,000 families.

Parents
will be able to open an online voucher account with a voucher provider and have
their payments topped up by the government. For every 80 pence that families pay in,
the government will put in 20 pence
, up to the annual limit on
costs for each child of £2,000 (£4,000 for disabled children). Parents will
then be able to use the vouchers for any Ofsted-regulated childcare in England
and the equivalent bodies in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

For the purposes of tax-free
childcare, a ‘parent’ is defined as an individual who has responsibility for a
child, and the child’s primary residence must also be with the parent. This
will ensure that adoptive parents, extended family members, and others who have
taken on primary responsibility for raising a child, and who reside with the
child, can also receive tax-free childcare. Lone parents will be eligible for
the new scheme, provided they meet the criteria.

HMRC will consider the employment
status of each member of a couple who live together as a household, including
where one of the couple does not have responsibility for the child. Both
parents must be in employment. Those families where only one parent in a couple
is in employment, or where a lone parent is not in employment, will not be
eligible for support.

The scheme will be available for
children up to the age of 12, or 17 for children with disabilities.

To qualify, parents will have to
be in work, and each expecting to earn at least £115 a week. Each parent must
not have income over £100,000 per year.

Tax-Free Childcare will be
launched from early 2017. The scheme will be rolled out gradually to families,
with parents of the youngest children able to apply first.

Parents will be able to apply for
all their children at the same time, when their youngest child becomes
eligible. All eligible parents will be able to join the scheme by the end of
2017.

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