Neal Caffrey

Child Tax Credit Refund Calculator

Child Tax Credit Estimator

Household & Dependents
Determines the MAGI phase-out threshold ($200k vs $400k).
Eligible for up to $2,000 per child.
Eligible for a non-refundable $500 credit.
Income & Tax Liability
W-2 wages and net self-employment. Required for the refundable portion.
Used to determine if your credit phases out. Usually similar to Earned Income.
Your total tax bill before applying the CTC. If $0, the entire credit moves to the refundable calculation.

Estimated Tax Benefit

Total Child Tax Credit Value $0 Combined impact on your tax return.
Benefit Breakdown
Credit Applied to Tax Liability: $0
(Reduces the amount of tax you owe)
Refundable Portion (ACTC): +$0
(Added to your tax refund as cash back)
Income Phase-Out Applied: Because your MAGI exceeds the threshold for your filing status, your maximum credit was reduced by $0. The IRS reduces credits by $50 for every $1,000 over the limit.
Calculator Assumptions: This tool uses the parameters for the current tax year: a maximum of $2,000 per qualifying child under 17, a $500 non-refundable credit for other dependents, and a maximum refundable Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) of $1,700 per child. The phase-out begins at $200,000 ($400,000 if Married Filing Jointly).

What Is the Child Tax Credit?

The Child Tax Credit (CTC) is a federal tax credit for taxpayers with qualifying children under age 17.

For the current tax year, the basic rules are:

  • Up to $2,000 per qualifying child under 17
  • Up to $500 for other dependents age 17+
  • Up to $1,700 per child may be refundable (this is called the Additional Child Tax Credit or ACTC)

The credit works in two parts:

  1. Non-refundable portion – reduces the tax you owe.
  2. Refundable portion (ACTC) – may increase your tax refund even if you owe little or no tax.

What Does a Child Tax Credit Refund Calculator Do?

A Child Tax Credit refund calculator estimates:

  • Your total available credit
  • How much reduces your tax bill
  • How much may be refunded to you as cash
  • Whether your income causes a phase-out

It uses five main inputs:

  1. Filing status
  2. Number of qualifying children under 17
  3. Number of other dependents
  4. Earned income
  5. Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI)
  6. Estimated tax liability before credits

Based on these values, the calculator follows IRS rules step by step.


Step 1: Calculate the Maximum Credit

The calculator first determines your maximum possible credit:

Formula:

  • $2,000 × qualifying children
  • $500 × other dependents

Example:

  • 2 qualifying children → $4,000
  • 1 other dependent → $500
  • Total maximum credit = $4,500

This is your starting point.


Step 2: Apply the Income Phase-Out

The Child Tax Credit begins to phase out if your income exceeds certain limits:

  • $200,000 for Single, Head of Household, or Married Filing Separately
  • $400,000 for Married Filing Jointly

If your income exceeds the threshold:

  • The credit is reduced by $50 for every $1,000 over the limit
  • The IRS rounds up to the next $1,000

Example of Phase-Out

If you are single and your MAGI is $205,200:

  • Threshold: $200,000
  • Excess income: $5,200
  • Rounded up to $6,000
  • Reduction: 6 × $50 = $300

Your credit is reduced by $300.

The calculator automatically performs this step and shows the reduction clearly.


Step 3: Apply the Credit to Your Tax Bill

Next, the calculator applies the credit to your tax liability.

Tax liability means your total tax before credits.

If your tax bill is $1,500 and your allowed credit is $4,000:

  • $1,500 reduces your tax to $0
  • Remaining $2,500 may qualify for a refund (depending on earned income rules)

The $500 credit for other dependents is non-refundable. It only reduces tax owed.


Step 4: Calculate the Refundable Portion (ACTC)

The refundable portion follows special rules.

You may qualify for a refund if:

  • You have earned income above $2,500
  • You have unused Child Tax Credit remaining
  • You meet income requirements

ACTC Formula

Refundable amount is the smallest of:

  1. Unused Child Tax Credit
  2. $1,700 per qualifying child
  3. 15% of earned income over $2,500

Example

  • Earned income: $30,000
  • Income above $2,500 = $27,500
  • 15% of that = $4,125

If you have one child:

  • Maximum refundable = $1,700
  • So refund = $1,700 (not $4,125)

The calculator handles this automatically.


What Information You Need Before Using the Calculator

To get an accurate estimate, gather:

  • Your W-2 wages or net self-employment income
  • Your estimated tax before credits
  • Your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (usually close to total income)
  • Number of qualifying children under 17
  • Number of other dependents

Entering correct numbers makes a big difference.


Simple Full Example

Let’s walk through a realistic scenario.

Filing status: Married Filing Jointly
Children under 17: 2
Earned income: $60,000
MAGI: $60,000
Tax liability before credits: $3,000

Step 1: Maximum credit

2 × $2,000 = $4,000

Step 2: No phase-out

Income is under $400,000 → no reduction

Step 3: Apply to tax bill

$3,000 reduces tax to zero
$1,000 credit remains

Step 4: Refundable calculation

15% × ($60,000 − $2,500) = $8,625
Maximum refundable = 2 × $1,700 = $3,400
Unused credit = $1,000

Refund = $1,000

Final Benefit

  • $3,000 reduced tax
  • $1,000 refund
  • Total benefit = $4,000

That is how the calculator reaches its result.


Why a Child Tax Credit Refund Calculator Is Helpful

Many families assume they will receive the full $2,000 per child as a refund. That is not always true.

The calculator helps you:

  • Understand the refundable vs non-refundable portion
  • See how earned income affects your refund
  • Check whether phase-out rules reduce your benefit
  • Estimate your total tax savings before filing

It removes guesswork.


Common Mistakes People Make

Here are a few errors the calculator helps prevent:

  • Confusing total income with earned income
  • Forgetting about the phase-out at higher income levels
  • Assuming the full credit is always refundable
  • Ignoring tax liability before credits

Understanding these details can prevent surprises at tax time.


Important Assumptions Used in the Calculator

The calculator is based on:

  • $2,000 maximum per qualifying child
  • $500 non-refundable credit for other dependents
  • $1,700 maximum refundable per child
  • $2,500 earned income threshold
  • 15% refundable rate
  • $200,000 / $400,000 phase-out thresholds

Tax laws can change, so always confirm current year rules.