The Australian Government is changing the Child Care Benefit (CCB)/ Child Care Rebate (CCR) subsidy and implementing a new child care package called the Child Care Subsidy. It will make child care more flexible, accessible and affordable for families.
Key Child Care Subsidy changes for families:
- Child Care Subsidy commences 2 July 2018
- Single, means and activity tested payment
- Eligibility is determined by an activity test (both parents must work, study or volunteer at least 8 hours a fortnight)
- For families earning more than $185,710 an annual subsidy cap of $10,000 per child will apply
- Paid directly to service providers and passed on to families as fee reduction
- Families will receive a fortnightly statement via email of child care usage from Kids Club, which includes the payment of the subsidy and out of pocket costs
What determines a family’s level of child care subsidy?
1. Combined family Income
2. Activity Level of both parents
3. Type of Child Care Service (for us: Long Day Care)
1. Combined Family Income
- Families earning $65,710 or less will receive a subsidy of 85% of the actual fee charged (up to 85% of an hourly rate cap)
- Family incomes above $65,710 – the subsidy gradually decreases to 20% when family income between $250,000 and $340,000
- Families on $170,710 – $250,000 will receive a subsidy of 50% of fees
- No annual cap on subsidies for families under $185,710
- For families with incomes of $350,000 or more, there is no subsidy
Please click here to view the Child Care Subsidy estimator.
2. Activity Level of both Parents
Activity Test Example – hours of activity
- Parent one, works 76 hours per fortnight – Step 3 of the Activity Level
- Parent two, works 40 hours per fortnight – Step 2 of the Activity Level
As parent two has the lower activity, the family is eligible for 72 hours per fortnight of subsidised child care.
3. Service type: Hourly Fee Cap for Long Day Care
Fee subsidies based on a set hourly rate ($11,55 for centre-based day care)
Support for disadvantaged and vulnerable families
The package also provides targeted additional fee assistance through a new Child Care Safety Net.
The Additional Child Care Subsidy (July 2018) – a top up payment for families who are genuinely disadvantaged.
Refer to the new child care package Child Care Safety Net factsheet for additional information.
Transitioning to the new system
Under the new system, existing child care payments will be replaced with the Child Care Subsidy and Additional Child Care Subsidy.
Centrelink will contact families directly to provide information on current entitlements and how they may change under new arrangements. This may include asking families for additional information, to ensure that they move onto the new payment system smoothly.
For more information on the new child care package, visit www.education.gov.au