Tax-Free Childcare UK Guide Up to £2,000 Per Year Towards Childcare Costs
Everything you need to know about Tax-Free Childcare in 2026 — how the government top-up works, who qualifies, how to apply, what you can spend it on, and how to use it alongside your free childcare hours to maximise the saving.
① How Tax-Free Childcare Works
Tax-Free Childcare (TFC) is a government scheme that pays 20p towards your childcare costs for every 80p you deposit — up to a maximum government contribution of £2,000 per child per year (or £4,000 for disabled children). You pay money into an online childcare account, the government tops it up, and you use the combined total to pay your approved childcare provider.
② Who Is Eligible
The eligibility criteria for Tax-Free Childcare mirror the working parent criteria for the 30-hour free childcare entitlement — the same household qualifies for both schemes. If you already have a 30-hour code, you almost certainly qualify for TFC as well.
③ How to Apply and Set Up Your Account
You apply for Tax-Free Childcare through the Government Gateway at childcarechoices.gov.uk. The same application process handles both your TFC account and (if applicable) your 30-hour free childcare code. You will need your National Insurance number, your child’s details, and bank account information to make deposits.
④ What You Can Pay For
Tax-Free Childcare can be used for a wide range of approved childcare costs — significantly broader than free childcare hours, which are limited to registered providers offering sessional care.
Eligible childcare includes: Ofsted-registered nurseries, pre-schools and childminders; nannies registered with an approved childcare agency; before and after-school clubs; holiday clubs and sports camps (during school holidays); and childcare provided by childminders on domestic premises. The provider must be Ofsted-registered (or equivalent in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) to accept TFC payments.
Fees for meals, consumables and activities that are charged as part of the childcare package can be included — including the “top-up” fees that some nurseries charge above the funded-hours rate. This is a meaningful practical advantage: TFC can cover the costs that free hours do not.
⑤ Tax-Free Childcare vs Free Childcare Hours
These are not competing schemes — they are complementary. The free childcare hours reduce the amount of childcare you pay for; TFC reduces the cost of what remains. Most working families with children under 11 should be using both simultaneously.
| Feature | Free Childcare Hours | Tax-Free Childcare |
|---|---|---|
| Age range | 9 months to 4 years (working families); 3–4 years universal | Under 11 (under 17 for disabled children) |
| How saving works | Reduces hours you pay for | 20% top-up on what you deposit |
| Max saving | Up to 30 hrs/wk free (value varies by nursery rate) | £2,000 per child per year |
| Can use together? | Yes — use both simultaneously | |
| Can use for holiday clubs? | No | Yes |
| Compatible with UC? | Yes | No — UC childcare element instead |
⑥ Maximising Your Tax-Free Childcare Saving
Deposit in advance when possible
You can deposit up to £2,500 per quarter per child — regardless of when you spend it. If you have a large childcare bill due (e.g. a summer holiday club), deposit in advance to ensure you receive the full top-up before the payment is due. The top-up applies to deposits, not to payments — so front-loading deposits ahead of a big spend maximises what you receive.
Use it for costs free hours don’t cover
The most efficient use of TFC is for costs that free hours do not offset: hours above your funded entitlement, wraparound care (breakfast clubs, after-school clubs), holiday childcare, and the top-up fees some nurseries charge above the funded rate. Apply the free hours first to reduce your base bill, then use TFC to cover the residual costs.
Both parents apply separately for older children
Each child has one TFC account. If you have a child aged 5 and above (past the free hours age), TFC is the primary government childcare support available to you — the £2,000 per year saving is the main tool at your disposal until the child is 11.
Apply for TFC when you start childcare. Stack it with free hours. Use it for holiday clubs too.
Tax-Free Childcare is consistently underused — approximately 40% of eligible families do not claim it, leaving meaningful money unclaimed. The application takes 10 minutes and the saving can be substantial for families with two or more children. The most important practical steps: apply before you need it, set up a standing order into the account to build up the balance, reconfirm every 3 months, and use it for everything eligible — including holiday clubs, which many parents do not realise are covered.
For the full picture of childcare costs and entitlements, use our Nursery Cost Calculator alongside the free childcare hours guide.

