Federal Legislation
Congress Advances Child Care Tax Incentives
March 14, 2026
Congress has introduced bipartisan legislation aimed at expanding employer-provided child care benefits through enhanced federal tax incentives and support mechanisms. Representative Adrian Smith's Small Business Dependent Care FSA Opportunity Act proposes a federal tax credit to help small businesses offset startup and administrative costs associated with establishing Dependent Care Flexible Spending Accounts (DCFSAs). Concurrently, Senators Maggie Hassan and Dan Sullivan have introduced the Child Care Tax Benefit Outreach and Assistance Act, which seeks to establish a Business Child Care Liaison within the IRS to improve employer awareness and utilization of existing child care tax incentives. These legislative efforts build on prior incentives under the Working Families Tax Cuts Act and aim to increase employer participation in child care support programs, thereby strengthening workforce retention and economic competitiveness.
- These bills signal potential new federal tax credits and administrative support roles that procurement professionals should track for impacts on small business benefits programs and tax-related services.
- Agencies and contractors involved in employee benefits administration, tax consulting, and workforce support services may find emerging opportunities to assist employers in implementing and managing DCFSAs.
- The establishment of an IRS liaison role indicates increased federal coordination and outreach, which could lead to expanded educational and compliance requirements for employers.
- Organizations should evaluate how these incentives might influence procurement strategies related to employee benefits and workforce development initiatives.
The startup and administrative costs make providing competitive benefits challenging. Our bipartisan bill will empower small businesses to offer DCFSAs, easing the financial burden of child care for working families while helping these businesses remain competitive in todayβs hiring landscape.
— Adrian Smith
The tax code is an important part of a comprehensive federal effort to help families struggling with the high cost of child care. This change will work together with essential child care grants and child care tax credits to give a tax break to families to help them thrive.
— Danny K. Davis
This bipartisan legislation will help cut through the confusion around federal child care tax incentives, increase awareness among businesses about these incentives, and make it easier for Granite State businesses and employers across the country to invest in the child care that their employees need to stay in the workforce.
— Senator Maggie Hassan
Agencies
United States House of Representatives, Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Contracts
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Locations
Sources
- Smith Introduces Bipartisan Bill Aimed at Expanding Child Care Benefits Through Small Businesses · North Platte Post · Mar 12
- Senators Hassan, Sullivan Introduce Bill to Help More Businesses Provide Child Care to Employees · Hassan Senate · Mar 13
- Sullivan, Hassan Introduce Legislation to Encourage Employer-Provided Child Care · Sullivan Senate · Mar 14