
Singapore Working Mother’s Child Relief Calculator
Calculate your WMCR tax relief for Year of Assessment 2025. Supports both fixed dollar and percentage-based calculations.
| Child | Relief Type | Rate/Amount | Relief (SGD) |
|---|
Fixed Dollar Relief (Children Born On or After 1 Jan 2024)
| Child Order | Fixed Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Child | S$8,000 | Per year |
| 2nd Child | S$10,000 | Per year |
| 3rd Child and Above | S$12,000 | Each child per year |
Percentage-Based Relief (Children Born Before 1 Jan 2024)
| Child Order | Percentage of Income | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Child | 15% | Of earned income |
| 2nd Child | 20% | Of earned income |
| 3rd Child and Above | 25% | Each child |
Estimated Tax Impact
| Item | Before WMCR | After WMCR | Savings |
|---|
Singapore Working Mother's Child Relief Calculator: Maximise Your Tax Savings in 2025-2026
The Working Mother's Child Relief (WMCR) stands as one of Singapore's most significant tax incentives designed to support working mothers who balance career responsibilities with raising children. Administered by the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS), this relief recognises the invaluable contribution of working mothers to both the economy and family life. Understanding how to calculate and maximise your WMCR entitlement can result in substantial tax savings, potentially reducing your tax bill by thousands of dollars annually.
Our Singapore Working Mother's Child Relief Calculator provides working mothers with an accurate estimate of their potential tax relief based on their specific circumstances, including income level, number of children, and each child's birth date. With the major policy changes effective from Year of Assessment 2025, where WMCR has transitioned from a percentage-based system to fixed dollar amounts for children born on or after 1 January 2024, having a reliable calculation tool has become essential for proper tax planning.
Understanding the Working Mother's Child Relief
The Working Mother's Child Relief is a unique tax benefit exclusively available to working mothers in Singapore who are married, divorced, or widowed. Unlike other child-related tax reliefs that can be claimed by either parent, the WMCR specifically rewards mothers who continue their professional careers while raising Singapore Citizen children. This relief aims to encourage married women to remain in the workforce after having children, acknowledging the dual roles they fulfil both at home and in the economy.
The relief operates by reducing the mother's taxable income, which directly translates to lower income tax payable. For many working mothers, particularly those with multiple children, the WMCR can represent their largest single tax relief, potentially saving thousands of dollars in taxes each year. The scheme has been continuously refined since its introduction to better support working families, with the most significant recent change being the transition from percentage-based to fixed dollar relief for qualifying children born from 2024 onwards.
From Year of Assessment 2025, Singapore operates two parallel WMCR calculation systems. Children born before 1 January 2024 use the percentage-based method, while children born on or after this date use fixed dollar amounts. Mothers with children spanning both periods must calculate reliefs using both systems for their respective children.
WMCR Eligibility Requirements for Year of Assessment 2025
To claim the Working Mother's Child Relief for Year of Assessment 2025 (income year 2024), you must satisfy all the following conditions during 2024. First, you must be a working mother who is married, divorced, or widowed. Single mothers and male taxpayers are not eligible for this particular relief. Second, you must have taxable earned income from employment, pensions, trade, business, profession, or vocation. Your taxable earned income is calculated as your total earned income less allowable expenses.
Third, you must have maintained a child who is a Singapore Citizen as at 31 December 2024. The child must also satisfy all conditions under the Qualifying Child Relief (QCR) or Child Relief (Disability). This means the child must be unmarried and either below 16 years of age, or 16 years and above but studying full-time at any educational institution during the year. Additionally, the child must not have earned an annual income exceeding S$8,000 in 2024. Note that this income threshold was increased from S$4,000 to S$8,000 from Year of Assessment 2025 onwards.
It is important to understand that the WMCR amount you can claim is based on the date your child became a Singapore Citizen, not necessarily their birth date. If your child was born before 1 January 2024 but became a Singapore Citizen only after this date, the fixed dollar rate of WMCR will apply. You may also claim WMCR in your tax filing for Year of Assessment 2025 even if your child passed away during 2024, provided all other conditions were met at the time of the child's passing.
Fixed Dollar Relief Amounts for Children Born From 2024
As part of the Government's enhanced support for Marriage and Parenthood announced in Budget 2023, the WMCR has undergone a fundamental restructuring for children born or adopted on or after 1 January 2024. Instead of calculating relief as a percentage of the mother's earned income, the new system provides fixed dollar amounts based on child order. This change primarily benefits lower to middle-income working mothers, providing them with more predictable and often higher relief amounts.
Under the new fixed dollar system, eligible working mothers can claim S$8,000 in annual relief for their first qualifying child, S$10,000 for their second child, and S$12,000 each for their third and subsequent children. These amounts are independent of the mother's income level, meaning a mother earning S$30,000 annually receives the same relief amount as one earning S$150,000, subject to the overall caps. This represents a significant shift towards greater equity in the relief system.
The Government estimates that working mothers in lower to middle-income groups, specifically those with annual earned income of approximately S$53,000 and below, who have their first child born on or after 1 January 2024, will benefit to a greater extent from these fixed amounts compared to the previous percentage-based system. For instance, a mother earning S$40,000 with a first child under the old system would receive S$6,000 in relief (15% of income), while the new system provides S$8,000, representing an additional S$2,000 in relief.
For a first child born on or after 1 January 2024, the breakeven income level is approximately S$53,333 (S$8,000 ÷ 15%). Mothers earning below this amount benefit more from the fixed dollar system, while those earning above may receive less relief than the old percentage-based calculation would have provided.
Percentage-Based Relief for Children Born Before 2024
For children born or adopted before 1 January 2024, the existing percentage-based WMCR calculation continues unchanged. Under this system, the relief amount is calculated as a percentage of the mother's earned income, with the percentage determined by the child's order in the family unit. The first child entitles the mother to 15% of her earned income as relief, the second child adds 20%, and the third and subsequent children each add 25%.
When a mother has multiple qualifying children born before 2024, these percentages are cumulative. For example, a mother with three qualifying children can claim up to 60% of her earned income as WMCR (15% + 20% + 25%). However, the total WMCR claimable is always capped at 100% of the mother's earned income, regardless of how many children she has. This percentage cap exists alongside the absolute S$50,000 per child cap when combined with QCR.
The percentage-based system particularly benefits higher-income earners with children born before 2024. A mother earning S$100,000 annually with a first child would receive S$15,000 in WMCR under the percentage system, compared to only S$8,000 if her child had been born in 2024. This differential has led some to consider the timing implications of the policy change, though the decision to have children should naturally consider many factors beyond tax relief.
Understanding Child Order for WMCR Claims
The order of your children in the family unit is a critical factor in determining your WMCR entitlement, and it may not always align with simple birth order. IRAS has specific guidelines for determining child order that consider various scenarios including biological children, step-children, and legally adopted children. Understanding these rules is essential for accurate relief calculation.
For biological children and step-children who are not the mother's own, the date of birth determines the child's order. This means if you have a biological child born in 2020 and then adopt a child who was born in 2018, the adopted child would be considered your first child for WMCR purposes because of their earlier birth date. Importantly, deceased and stillborn children are counted in determining the order of children. From Year of Assessment 2022 onwards, stillborn children count towards WMCR claims where the married woman, divorcee, or widow claiming the deduction is the natural mother of the stillborn child.
For legally adopted children, the date of legal adoption determines the child's order, not their birth date. This can significantly impact relief calculations when a family has both biological and adopted children. If you adopted a child in 2023 and had a biological child born in 2022, your biological child would be considered your first child and the adopted child your second, even if the adopted child is older by birth date.
If you have children both before and after 1 January 2024, the child order is determined across all children, but different calculation methods apply based on each child's birth date. For example, if your first child was born in 2020 and second child in 2024, you claim percentage-based relief for the first child and fixed dollar relief for the second child, using their respective child order positions.
Interaction Between WMCR and Qualifying Child Relief
Working mothers should understand that WMCR can be claimed in addition to, not instead of, Qualifying Child Relief (QCR) or Child Relief (Disability). However, these reliefs interact with each other through a combined cap mechanism that requires careful planning. QCR or Child Relief (Disability) claims are allowed first, regardless of whether the claim is made by the mother, father, or shared between parents. The WMCR is then limited to the remaining balance up to S$50,000 per child.
For instance, if a husband claims the full QCR of S$4,000 on a qualifying child, and the wife is eligible for WMCR, she can still claim WMCR up to a maximum of S$46,000 for that child (S$50,000 less S$4,000 already claimed as QCR). In most practical cases, the WMCR will not approach this cap, but for high-income mothers claiming percentage-based relief on pre-2024 children, the cap can become relevant, particularly when combined with Child Relief (Disability) amounts of S$7,500 per disabled child.
Parents can share QCR or Child Relief (Disability) between themselves based on an agreed apportionment, but the total claim amounts must not exceed S$4,000 for QCR and S$7,500 for Child Relief (Disability) per child. Strategic apportionment can help optimise overall family tax savings, particularly when one spouse has higher income or falls into a higher tax bracket. Financial planning advisors often recommend modelling different apportionment scenarios to maximise family-wide tax benefits.
Personal Relief Cap and Its Impact on WMCR
Singapore imposes a personal income tax relief cap of S$80,000 per Year of Assessment. This cap applies to the total amount of all tax reliefs claimed, including but not limited to WMCR, QCR, CPF cash top-up relief, SRS relief, spouse relief, parent relief, earned income relief, and various other reliefs. When a working mother's combined reliefs exceed this cap, the excess reliefs beyond S$80,000 are not allowed, effectively reducing the tax benefit received.
For working mothers with significant incomes and multiple children, plus other substantial reliefs such as CPF top-up contributions, understanding this cap is crucial for tax planning. There is little benefit in making additional voluntary contributions or claiming optional reliefs if you are already at or near the S$80,000 cap. In such cases, alternative tax-efficient strategies or deferring certain claims to future assessment years may be more appropriate.
The S$80,000 relief cap is applied after all individual relief calculations and the per-child cap of S$50,000 for combined QCR/Child Relief (Disability) and WMCR. This means even if your calculated reliefs are within individual category limits, they may still be reduced at the final stage if the total exceeds S$80,000. IRAS automatically applies this cap when processing your tax assessment, so you may receive less relief than expected if you have not accounted for the overall cap in your planning.
If your total potential reliefs exceed S$80,000, prioritise claiming reliefs that provide the most benefit per dollar. WMCR and QCR are generally the most beneficial child-related reliefs. Consider whether voluntary contributions like CPF top-ups or SRS contributions would actually provide additional tax benefit, or whether that cash would be better deployed elsewhere given the relief cap limitation.
How to Calculate Your WMCR: Step-by-Step Guide
Calculating your WMCR entitlement requires a systematic approach that accounts for each child's birth date, their order in the family, and your earned income. Begin by listing all your qualifying children in order, using the rules for biological, step, and adopted children as described earlier. Note each child's birth or adoption date to determine whether they fall under the fixed dollar or percentage-based system.
For children born on or after 1 January 2024, simply apply the fixed dollar amounts: S$8,000 for the first child, S$10,000 for the second, and S$12,000 for the third and subsequent children. Add these amounts together for your total fixed dollar WMCR. For children born before 1 January 2024, calculate the percentage-based relief by multiplying your earned income by the applicable percentage for each child (15%, 20%, or 25% based on child order) and sum these amounts.
Next, check your results against the various caps. Ensure that the combined QCR/Child Relief (Disability) and WMCR for each child does not exceed S$50,000. Verify that your total WMCR across all children does not exceed 100% of your earned income. Finally, add all your other personal reliefs and confirm the total does not exceed S$80,000. If any cap is exceeded, reduce your relief claims accordingly, prioritising higher-value reliefs where you have flexibility.
WMCR for Different Family Scenarios
Family situations vary widely, and the WMCR rules accommodate many different circumstances. For mothers with children spanning the January 2024 threshold, a hybrid calculation is necessary. Consider a mother with her first child born in 2022 and second child born in 2024. If she earns S$80,000 annually, her WMCR would be S$12,000 for the first child (15% × S$80,000 = S$12,000) plus S$10,000 for the second child (fixed amount for second child), totalling S$22,000 in relief.
For divorced mothers or widows, the eligibility requirements remain the same as for married mothers. The relief can be claimed regardless of custody arrangements, provided the mother has maintained the child during the year. If the child spends time with both parents, the mother who has maintained the child (typically through providing financial or other support) can claim the relief. In cases of shared custody, clear documentation of maintenance provided can support the relief claim if questioned by IRAS.
Step-children present a unique scenario. A working mother can claim WMCR on her step-child if the child is from her current husband's previous marriage or relationship, provided the child meets all qualifying criteria and the mother has maintained the child during the year. The step-child's birth date determines their order among all children in the family unit, including the mother's own biological children.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Claiming WMCR
One of the most common errors working mothers make is incorrectly determining child order. Remember that child order is not simply birth order within your biological children but considers all children including step-children, adopted children, deceased children, and stillborn children. Failing to account for these can result in miscalculating relief amounts and potentially facing adjustments or queries from IRAS during assessment.
Another frequent mistake is not accounting for the child's income threshold. From Year of Assessment 2025, a qualifying child must not have earned an annual income exceeding S$8,000. This includes allowances and salaries from National Service, internships, school attachments, and part-time employment. If your child earned above this threshold in 2024, they do not qualify for either QCR or WMCR for Year of Assessment 2025, even if they met all other criteria.
Many mothers also forget to consider the citizenship requirement. The child must be a Singapore Citizen as at 31 December of the relevant year. If a child only became a citizen after this date, they would not qualify for that Year of Assessment. Additionally, some mothers mistakenly claim WMCR on children who are 16 years or older but not studying full-time. The age and study conditions must both be satisfied for children aged 16 and above.
Maintain proper documentation including your child's Singapore citizenship certificate, evidence of maintaining the child (financial records, receipts), and proof of full-time study for children aged 16 and above. While IRAS auto-includes reliefs based on previous years' claims, having documentation ready can expedite any verification queries and prevent delays in your assessment.
Tax Savings Impact of WMCR
The actual tax savings from WMCR depend on your marginal tax rate, which varies based on your total taxable income after all reliefs and deductions. Singapore's progressive income tax rates for residents range from 0% for the first S$20,000 to 24% for income above S$1,000,000. The WMCR reduces your taxable income, and your savings equal the relief amount multiplied by your marginal tax rate.
For a working mother in the 11.5% tax bracket (taxable income between S$80,001 and S$120,000), claiming WMCR of S$20,000 would save approximately S$2,300 in taxes (S$20,000 × 11.5%). For a mother in the higher 18% bracket (taxable income between S$160,001 and S$200,000), the same S$20,000 WMCR would save approximately S$3,600. This demonstrates why higher-income mothers may feel the percentage-based system was more beneficial for their pre-2024 children.
When planning for tax savings, remember that reliefs first reduce income in the highest tax bracket you fall into. If your chargeable income places you in the 15% bracket, your WMCR first offsets income taxed at 15%, potentially dropping some income into the 11.5% bracket. This progressive nature of tax relief means the marginal benefit decreases as your income decreases, though the total benefit remains substantial.
Combining WMCR with Other Working Mother Benefits
Working mothers in Singapore can access multiple tax reliefs and benefits beyond WMCR. The Grandparent Caregiver Relief (GCR) provides an additional S$3,000 annual relief for working mothers whose parent, parent-in-law, grandparent, or grandparent-in-law looks after any Singapore Citizen child aged 12 years and below. The caregiver must be living in Singapore and not earning trade, business, profession, vocation, or employment income exceeding S$4,000 in the year.
The Parenthood Tax Rebate (PTR) is another significant benefit that can be claimed alongside WMCR. PTR is a one-time tax rebate rather than a relief, meaning it directly reduces your tax payable rather than your taxable income. The rebate is S$5,000 for the first child, S$10,000 for the second child, and S$20,000 for the third and subsequent children. Unlike WMCR which is claimed annually, PTR is a lifetime benefit per child that can be used over multiple assessment years until exhausted.
Working mothers previously could also claim the Foreign Domestic Worker Levy (FDWL) Relief, which allowed claiming twice the levy paid on one foreign domestic worker. However, this relief has lapsed from Year of Assessment 2025 onwards. Working mothers who relied on this relief should note that while the tax relief is no longer available, those caring for dependents continue to enjoy a concessionary levy of S$60 per month for hiring foreign domestic workers.
Changes to WMCR Over the Years
The Working Mother's Child Relief has evolved significantly since its introduction. Understanding this evolution provides context for the current system and helps working mothers appreciate how policy changes might affect their future planning. The scheme was originally designed with percentage-based relief to incentivise workforce participation among mothers, with higher-income mothers receiving proportionally larger benefits in absolute terms.
The 2023 Budget announcement marked the most significant change in the scheme's history, introducing the fixed dollar relief system for children born from 2024 onwards. This change was part of a broader review of Marriage and Parenthood support measures, aimed at providing greater predictability and more substantial support to lower and middle-income working mothers. The government recognised that the previous system, while effective, disproportionately benefited higher-income earners.
Looking ahead, working mothers should stay informed about potential future changes to tax reliefs. The government regularly reviews family support measures as part of budget planning cycles. While no immediate changes have been announced, the transition to fixed dollar WMCR suggests a continuing policy direction towards more equitable distribution of tax benefits across income levels. Subscribing to IRAS updates or following budget announcements can help mothers plan accordingly.
Mothers with children born both before and after 1 January 2024 will operate under both systems indefinitely. There are no transitional provisions that would convert pre-2024 children to the fixed dollar system or vice versa. Each child's relief calculation method is permanently determined by their birth date.
Filing Your WMCR Claim with IRAS
Filing your WMCR claim is integrated into the standard income tax return process through the IRAS myTax Portal. For mothers who have claimed WMCR in previous years with no changes to their circumstances, IRAS typically auto-includes the relief based on prior year data. However, you should always verify the auto-included amounts and update if circumstances have changed, such as a new child, a child no longer qualifying, or changes in custody arrangements.
To file or update your WMCR claim, log in to the myTax Portal using Singpass or Singpass Foreign User Account. Navigate to the Individuals section and select "File Income Tax Return." Under the "Deductions, Tax Reliefs and Parenthood Tax Rebate" section, look for the child-related reliefs area. You can claim the Working Mother's Child Relief here by providing your child's details. If claiming for the first time or adding a new child, you will need to enter the child's particulars including NRIC number, date of birth, and citizenship status.
You do not need to enter the actual WMCR amount, as IRAS will automatically compute the allowable WMCR based on your eligibility when they process your Income Tax Return. This auto-computation uses your filed earned income and the child details you provide. After filing, you can check your Notice of Assessment to verify the relief amounts granted and raise any objections within the specified timeframe if you believe the amounts are incorrect.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
The Working Mother's Child Relief represents a significant opportunity for tax savings that working mothers in Singapore should fully utilise. With relief amounts of up to S$8,000 to S$12,000 per child under the new fixed dollar system, and percentage-based relief potentially reaching even higher amounts for higher-income mothers with pre-2024 children, the cumulative tax savings can be substantial over the years of raising children. Understanding both calculation systems is now essential for families with children born across the January 2024 threshold.
Our Singapore Working Mother's Child Relief Calculator simplifies this complex calculation by accounting for your specific circumstances, including your earned income, number of children, each child's birth date, and other reliefs already claimed. By providing accurate estimates of your potential WMCR entitlement, the calculator helps you plan effectively for tax season and make informed decisions about related financial planning matters such as voluntary CPF contributions or SRS investments.
As tax policies evolve and family circumstances change, staying informed about your eligibility and entitlements remains important. We recommend using this calculator regularly as your family situation changes and consulting the official IRAS website or a qualified tax professional for complex situations involving international elements, business income, or unusual family arrangements. With proper planning and timely claims, working mothers can maximise their tax savings and redirect those funds towards their family's future.