CostCalc

Location-specific calculator

Childcare vs. Career Retention Calculator for Canada

See whether a second income still pays off after daycare, commuting, and taxes with assumptions tailored to Canada.

Built for families asking whether daycare is worth it, whether one parent should stay home, and how much after-tax household income is actually preserved by keeping both careers active.

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How It Works

How this calculator helps answer the decision.

Built for families asking whether daycare is worth it, whether one parent should stay home, and how much after-tax household income is actually preserved by keeping both careers active.

What you will enter

  • Regional tax baseline: Select the market profile that should drive salary tax brackets, payroll assumptions, and output formatting.
  • Partner A Salary: Annual base salary or dependable cash compensation for Partner A before taxes.
  • Partner B Salary: Annual base salary or dependable cash compensation for Partner B before taxes.
  • Local Daycare Monthly Cost: Monthly all-in daycare, nanny-share, or equivalent care bill required to keep both careers active.

What you will get back

  • Partner A after-tax annual pay: Partner A's annual pay after region-adjusted income tax and payroll contributions.
  • Partner B after-tax annual pay: Partner B's annual pay after region-adjusted income tax and payroll contributions.
  • Annual childcare and commute drag: The annual operating cost required to keep both partners employed and commuting.
  • Dual-career retained income: Total after-tax income retained when both careers stay active after daycare and commuting costs.

What this model emphasizes

  • Estimate whether a second income is still worth keeping after daycare and commuting
  • Compare dual-income retained cash flow against either parent stepping back
  • Estimate the daycare break-even point for the lower earner after tax

Who this is for

  • Dual-income households comparing daycare costs with the real retained value of a second salary.
  • Parents deciding whether one partner should temporarily step back from work.
  • Families reviewing whether commuting and care costs are overwhelming the lower earner's contribution.

Common ways people use it

  • Compare both parents working versus one parent stepping back.
  • Estimate the daycare break-even point for the lower earner.
  • Pressure-test whether a salary increase or cheaper care option changes the decision materially.

Common questions

What does this calculator actually compare?

It compares the retained household income from keeping both partners employed against the retained income if either partner steps back and daycare is removed.

Why does the model focus on after-tax income instead of gross salary?

Because childcare and commuting decisions are really cash-flow decisions. Gross salary can overstate how much the second job is adding once taxes and work-related costs are included.

How should I use the daycare break-even result?

Treat it as the approximate monthly childcare price where the lower earner's job stops adding positive retained cash. If your local care quote is above that line, the setup needs a closer review.

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