Learn what an eligible dependant means in Canadian tax context and why it is more specific than the general idea of supporting a family member.
An eligible dependant is a dependant whose circumstances may allow a taxpayer to claim the Canadian amount for an eligible dependant if the relevant rules are met.
This term matters because many taxpayers hear it and assume it simply means “someone I support.” In Canadian tax context, the term is more specific. It points to a particular credit situation, not to every household member who depends on the taxpayer financially.
The eligible-dependant concept appears when family status, living arrangements, and support relationships affect a credit claim on the return. It is closely tied to the taxpayer’s marital or partnership status and to who actually lives in the household.
That is why the term often needs to be read alongside marital-status reporting. A person may be a dependant in everyday language without automatically creating an eligible-dependant claim for tax purposes.
A taxpayer who is not living with a spouse or common-law partner may be trying to determine whether supporting a child in the home could support an eligible-dependant claim. The right question is not just whether the child depends on the taxpayer, but whether the specific CRA conditions for that claim are met.
An eligible dependant is not the same thing as any dependant.
It is also not interchangeable with Canada Child Benefit eligibility. A household may receive a benefit or report a child on the return without that automatically settling the eligible-dependant issue.
Is eligible dependant just a generic label for any family member you help support? Answer: No. It is a specific Canadian tax concept tied to a particular credit claim.
Why does marital or partnership status matter when thinking about an eligible dependant? Answer: Because the claim is closely connected to household and spouse or partner context, not just to support by itself.
Eligible-dependant rules are fact-specific and can turn on living arrangements and other details, so taxpayers should always check the current CRA guidance for the exact claim.