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DTC Retroactive Claims: How to Recover Up to 10 Years of Tax

If a person was eligible for the DTC but did not claim it, they can recover up to 10 years of unclaimed credits by filing T1-Adjustment Requests for each year. A 10-year adult claim typically produces a refund of $15,000 to $30,000 plus interest. Once DTC is approved, related programs like RDSP, Child Disability Benefit, and provincial credits also unlock retroactively.

If a person has been eligible for the Disability Tax Credit but did not claim it in past years, they can recover up to 10 years of unclaimed credits by filing T1-Adjustment Requests for each year. A 10-year retroactive claim for an adult often produces a refund of $15,000 to $30,000 federal plus provincial; for a child the figures are similar or higher because of the supplement amount. CRA processes adjustments after the DTC eligibility is approved on the original or current T2201.

The 10-year window

CRA’s normal three-year reassessment period applies, but section 152(4.2) of the Income Tax Act allows the Minister to reassess up to 10 calendar years back at the taxpayer’s request. The same rule applies to the DTC: a taxpayer can file T1-ADJ adjustments for up to 10 calendar years of prior returns. Years older than 10 are statute-barred and cannot be adjusted.

How a retroactive claim works

  1. File Form T2201 to establish DTC eligibility. CRA approves and issues a determination letter stating the years for which the person is eligible.
  2. Identify the years of eligibility. CRA’s letter will state “the disability tax credit is approved for the years XXXX onwards” or “for the years XXXX to YYYY.”
  3. For each prior year still within the 10-year window, file Form T1-ADJ Request for an Adjustment to a T1 Return adding the disability amount, supplement (if applicable), and any flow-on credits affected.
  4. Attach a brief explanation referencing the T2201 approval and the years being adjusted.
  5. CRA processes each year separately, issuing a notice of reassessment and refund (with interest).

Who can claim the DTC retroactively

Claimant Detail
The person with the disability Claims the disability amount on their own T1, reducing federal and provincial tax owing
A spouse or common-law partner Claims any amount the disabled person could not use because their tax owing was insufficient (DTC transfer to spouse)
A supporting parent or grandparent Claims for a dependant child or relative if they support the disabled person
A supporting adult child or sibling Claims for a dependent disabled parent or sibling

Worked example: 10-year retroactive claim for an adult

A 62-year-old has had multiple sclerosis since 2014 with a markedly restricted ability to walk, never previously claiming the DTC. In May 2026, she submits Form T2201 and CRA approves DTC eligibility back to 2014.

  • Years adjustable under the 10-year rule: 2016 to 2025 (10 calendar years before 2026).
  • Disability amounts (illustrative, federal):
    • 2025: $10,138 × 14% = $1,419 federal
    • 2024: $9,872 × 15% = $1,481 federal
    • 2023: $9,428 × 15% = $1,414 federal
    • …continues for each year back to 2016
  • Total federal credit refunded over 10 years: roughly $13,500.
  • Provincial DTC adds approximately $5,500 (Ontario) over 10 years.
  • CRA pays interest from the original filing deadline of each year. With prescribed rates of 5 to 9 percent over the period, interest could add another $4,000 to $7,000.
  • Total recovery: approximately $23,000 to $26,000.

Documentation that helps

Item Why it matters
Medical records showing the impairment existed in past years Supports CRA’s determination of when eligibility began
Multiple practitioners’ notes from different time points Strengthens the prolonged criterion and the back-dating
Hospital admissions or surgery records Anchors the timeline of impairment
Medication history Shows continuous treatment for the relevant condition
Specialist reports (psychiatry, neurology, oncology) Supports severity criteria

What CRA looks at when deciding the start year

The medical practitioner specifies on Form T2201 the year the markedly restricted state began. CRA evaluates the practitioner’s statement against any contradicting CRA records (e.g., prior-year T2201 denials) and issues a determination letter. The taxpayer can then claim only for years on or after the start year stated in the determination letter, up to the 10-year retroactive limit.

Processing time and order

The T2201 approval typically takes 8 to 16 weeks. After approval, T1-ADJ adjustments take an additional 8 to 12 weeks each. The total elapsed time from initial application to final refund of all retroactive years is typically 6 to 12 months. CRA processes the most recent year first and works backwards.

Other credits and benefits unlocked retroactively

Item Retroactive impact
Child Disability Benefit (CDB) Up to 10 years of CDB ($3,411/yr at 2025-26 max) are paid retroactively if the child was eligible
Provincial DTC equivalents Each province processes the credit separately when the federal DTC is approved
RDSP back-grants and bonds Once DTC is approved, an RDSP can be opened and prior-year unused grant/bond room is matched
Caregiver amount If a family member supported the disabled person, the caregiver may also be able to adjust prior returns
Home Buyers’ Plan / qualifying disability The four-year home ownership rule is waived for DTC-qualified individuals

Beware of contingent-fee disability tax services

Some clinics charge 20 to 30 percent of the refund as a contingent fee. The Disability Tax Credit Promoters Restrictions Act (in force since 2014) caps fees at amounts CRA prescribes by regulation, but enforcement varies. A taxpayer who completes Part A themselves and works with their family doctor on Part B can usually avoid four-figure fees. The total time investment is several hours of paperwork, not weeks.

Cross-references

Frequently asked questions

How many years can I claim the DTC retroactively?
Up to 10 calendar years, under section 152(4.2) of the Income Tax Act. A request filed in 2026 can adjust returns back to 2016.
How much is a 10-year retroactive DTC claim worth?
For an adult, typically $15,000 to $30,000 (federal plus provincial credits plus interest). For a child, similar or higher because of the supplement and back-paid Child Disability Benefit.
What forms do I need for a retroactive claim?
Form T2201 to establish eligibility, then a separate Form T1-ADJ Request for an Adjustment to a T1 Return for each prior year being adjusted.
Does CRA pay interest on retroactive DTC refunds?
Yes. Interest accrues from the original filing deadline of each year at the prescribed rate (currently 7 percent on individual refunds).
Can I claim the DTC retroactively for a deceased parent?
Yes. The legal representative of the deceased can file T1-ADJ adjustments for any year the deceased was eligible and the legal representative can support the claim with medical evidence.
Should I use a disability tax credit clinic?
Generally not necessary. Clinics often charge 20 to 30 percent of the refund. Most taxpayers can complete Part A themselves and have their family doctor complete Part B. The Disability Tax Credit Promoters Restrictions Act limits fees, but the cleanest path is to file directly.
Does retroactive DTC unlock other benefits?
Yes. Once DTC is approved, the Child Disability Benefit (up to 10 years), provincial DTC equivalents, RDSP eligibility (with prior-year grant and bond matching), and caregiver amounts can all be claimed retroactively.