A Dependent Care FSA lets you pay for childcare and adult dependent care with pre-tax dollars — saving you real money every year. Here are the 2026 limits and the complete guide.
2026 Dependent Care FSA Limits
| Filing Status | Annual Contribution Limit |
|---|---|
| Single filer | $5,000 |
| Married filing jointly | $5,000 (combined for both spouses) |
| Married filing separately | $2,500 per spouse |
| Head of household | $5,000 |
Important: The $5,000 limit is per household, not per child. You cannot contribute $5,000 per child.
How Much Can You Actually Save?
The DCFSA saves on federal income tax AND FICA (Social Security and Medicare):
| Income | Tax Bracket | Federal Income Tax Savings | FICA Savings | Total Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | 22% | $1,100 | $382 | $1,482 |
| $75,000 | 22% | $1,100 | $382 | $1,482 |
| $100,000 | 24% | $1,200 | $382 | $1,582 |
| $150,000 | 24% | $1,200 | $382 | $1,582 |
| $200,000 | 32% | $1,600 | $382 | $1,982 |
(FICA savings only apply if you earn under the Social Security wage base; assumes combined employee FICA rate of ~7.65% on $5,000)
Eligible Dependent Care Expenses
| ✅ Qualifies | ❌ Does Not Qualify |
|---|---|
| Licensed daycare center | Overnight camp |
| Preschool (while you work) | Tutoring |
| Before/after school care | Kindergarten tuition (education-related) |
| Summer day camp | Nursing home fees (until adult dependent test met) |
| Au pair / nanny (work-related portion) | Care when only one parent works (most cases) |
| Elder daycare for qualifying adult | Household services not related to dependent care |
The “Earned Income” Rule
You (and your spouse, if married) must both have earned income to use the Dependent Care FSA. Exceptions:
- A spouse who is a full-time student is treated as earning $250/month (per child under 5) or $500/month for one qualifying person
- A spouse who is incapacitated is treated as earning $250 or $500/month
How to Enroll in a Dependent Care FSA
- Open enrollment: Enroll during your employer’s open enrollment period (typically October–November)
- New hire: You may enroll within 30 days of starting a new job
- Life events: A qualifying life event (new child, change in care provider) allows mid-year enrollment
If your employer does not offer a DCFSA, you cannot open one independently — it must be employer-sponsored.
DCFSA vs. Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit
These are two separate tax benefits. You can use both, but DCFSA reduces the expense base for the credit:
| Feature | DCFSA | Child & Dependent Care Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Max benefit | $5,000 (pre-tax) | Up to $600–$1,050 credit |
| Income limit | None | Phased out for higher incomes |
| Employer required | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Savings type | Pre-tax contribution | Direct tax credit |
Strategy: Use the DCFSA for the first $5,000 of expenses, then claim the Child Care Credit on remaining eligible expenses (up to $3,000 for 1 child or $6,000 for 2+, minus the DCFSA amount used).
The Use-It-or-Lose-It Rule
Dependent Care FSA funds expire at the end of the plan year (or grace period):
- Use-it-or-lose-it: Unspent funds are forfeited — unlike an HSA, they do not roll over
- Some employers offer a grace period of up to 2.5 months (March 15) to spend remaining funds
- Some employers offer a rollover of up to $610 (2026 limit) for healthcare FSAs — this does NOT apply to Dependent Care FSAs
Plan your contributions carefully based on known or estimated annual childcare costs.