The Canada Workers Benefit (CWB) is a refundable tax credit for low- to modest-income workers. For the 2025 tax year (claimed when you file your 2025 return in spring 2026 and paid in advance through 2026), the maximum basic amount is $1,633 for singles and $2,813 for families. An additional disability supplement of up to $843 is available for workers eligible for the Disability Tax Credit. The benefit is paid in two ways: as a refundable credit on your tax return, and in advance through quarterly Advanced Canada Workers Benefit (ACWB) payments.
Quick answer: Up to $1,633 for single workers and $2,813 for families (2025 tax-year amounts, paid through 2026), plus a $843 disability supplement if you qualify. The benefit phases out above $26,855 (single) / $30,639 (family) of adjusted net income.
What this means: You qualify automatically by filing a tax return that includes working income. CRA also pays half of your expected benefit in advance through three quarterly ACWB payments — no separate application is required.
What to do next: See what CWB you would receive with your working income and family situation. Run the CWB calculator →
CWB maximum amounts (2025 tax year, paid through 2026)
| Component | 2025 tax-year maximum | Phase-in working income | Phase-out adjusted net income |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic CWB — single | $1,633 | $3,000+ of working income | Starts at $26,855, $0 at ~$37,474 |
| Basic CWB — family | $2,813 | $3,000+ of working income | Starts at $30,639, $0 at ~$49,391 |
| Disability supplement | $843 | $1,150+ of working income | Reduces from the household-specific threshold |
Quebec, Nunavut, and Alberta use province-specific configurations under a separate CRA-approved structure, so the maximum amounts and phase-out thresholds differ in those jurisdictions. The 2026 tax-year amounts are indexed and will be confirmed by CRA later in 2026 — the numbers above are the most current published values (2025 tax year, used for 2026 advance payments). Confirm with CRA before relying on a specific number.
Eligibility
You qualify for the basic CWB for the 2025 tax year (the most recent year with confirmed amounts) if you meet all of the following:
- Earn working income (employment or self-employment) during the year
- Were a Canadian resident throughout the year
- Are 19 or older at year-end, or live with a spouse, common-law partner, or eligible dependant
- Are not enrolled as a full-time student for more than 13 weeks (unless you have an eligible dependant)
- Are not in prison for 90 days or more during the year
- Adjusted net income is below the phase-out ceiling for your family situation
The disability supplement requires that you (or your spouse for a family CWB) are eligible for the Disability Tax Credit and have working income above $1,150.
How CWB is calculated
The benefit increases as working income rises (to encourage labour participation), maxes out at a plateau, then phases out as adjusted net family income rises. The mechanics:
- Phase-in: 27% of working income above $3,000, until you reach the maximum ($1,633 single or $2,813 family).
- Plateau: You receive the maximum until adjusted net family income reaches the phase-out threshold.
- Phase-out: 12% reduction on every dollar of adjusted net income above the threshold, until the benefit reaches zero.
The disability supplement layers on top with its own phase-in (27% of working income above $1,150 up to $843) and phase-out tied to the household’s adjusted net income.
Advance payments (ACWB)
If CRA expects you to qualify based on your prior-year return, you automatically receive 50% of the projected CWB in three advance instalments — you do not need to apply.
ACWB advance payments follow CRA’s standard quarterly schedule: July 12, October 11, and January 10 each year. When these dates fall on a weekend or statutory holiday, CRA issues the payment on the prior business day. Confirm the exact 2026 payment dates on your CRA My Account before relying on a specific calendar date.
The remaining 50% (or any top-up if the advance underestimated your entitlement) arrives as a refund when you file your tax return.
Worked example
Marcus is a single Ontario worker, no dependants, earning $25,000 from employment for the 2025 tax year (claimed when filing his 2025 return in 2026).
| Step | Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Working income above $3,000 | $25,000 − $3,000 | $22,000 |
| Phase-in: 27% × $22,000 | =$5,940 (capped at $1,633) | $1,633 |
| Adjusted net income | $25,000 | below phase-out threshold |
| Reduction | $0 | $0 |
| 2025 tax-year CWB | $1,633 | |
| ACWB advances (50%) | $272 × 3 quarterly | $816 |
| Refund at filing | Remainder | $817 |
If Marcus also qualifies for the disability supplement, add up to $843 on top, paid through the same schedule.
Two situations to optimize for
- Working income just above $3,000. The phase-in slope is steep (27 cents per dollar). If your working income is $5,000, you only get $540 of CWB. Increasing working income to the plateau level recovers up to $1,000+ more in benefit.
- Income near the phase-out threshold. The phase-out is 12 cents per dollar. RRSP contributions reduce adjusted net income dollar for dollar, which can recover $0.12 per dollar of CWB plus your marginal tax rate.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the maximum Canada Workers Benefit?
- $1,633 for single workers and $2,813 for families (2025 tax-year amounts, used for 2026 advance payments), plus a $843 disability supplement if you qualify for the Disability Tax Credit. 2026 tax-year amounts will be released by CRA later in 2026.
- Who qualifies for CWB?
- Canadian residents 19 or older (or with a spouse/dependant) who earn working income above $3,000 and whose adjusted net income is below the phase-out ceiling for their family type.
- What income level cuts off the CWB?
- Approximately $37,474 for singles and $49,391 for families on 2025 tax-year amounts. Above those thresholds the basic CWB is fully phased out. 2026 thresholds will be indexed and confirmed by CRA later in 2026.
- Do I have to apply for the advance CWB payments?
- No. CRA automatically issues advance payments if you qualified based on your prior-year tax return.
- When are CWB advance payments paid?
- CRA’s standard ACWB schedule is July 12, October 11, and January 10. When those dates fall on a weekend or statutory holiday, CRA issues the payment on the prior business day. Confirm the exact date for the current year on your CRA My Account.
- Is CWB taxable?
- No. The Canada Workers Benefit is a non-taxable refundable credit. The amounts received do not need to be added back to income.
- Are Quebec, Alberta, and Nunavut CWB rules different?
- Yes. Those three jurisdictions use a province-specific CWB configuration approved by CRA with different maximum amounts and phase-out thresholds.