Childcare subsidyIllinois Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP)
Sliding-scale subsidized childcare administered by IDHS through local CCR&R agencies. 2025 initial eligibility is at or below 225% of the Federal Poverty Level; redetermination eligibility is 275% FPL. Children under 13 (under 19 with documented special needs). Income guidelines re-indexed to current FPL effective July 1 each year.
Matchbook: CCAP reduces out-of-pocket dependent-care cost and therefore the correct DCFSA election. Matchbook asks Illinois employees whether they have applied or qualify for CCAP before recommending DCFSA contribution levels, and models the family co-pay rather than the full provider rate.
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PreschoolSmart Start Illinois (Universal Pre-K by 2027)
Governor Pritzker's FY24-launched initiative to reach universal free preschool for all Illinois 3- and 4-year-olds by 2027. Through FY25 the program added about 11,000 publicly funded preschool seats (5,800 in Year 1, 5,150 in Year 2), with a goal of 20,000 net new seats. Funded via the Early Childhood Block Grant administered by ISBE.
Matchbook: Smart Start slots are typically half-day or school-day, not full-day childcare. The correct DCFSA election for a Smart Start family is full-day center or home-care cost minus the Smart Start-funded hours, not zero. Matchbook models this split explicitly and flags employees in the rollout regions where 2025-2027 seat expansion is happening fastest.
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Children's health coverageAll Kids (Illinois CHIP and children's Medicaid)
Covers medical and dental care for uninsured Illinois children up to age 19. Medicaid-eligible at or below 147% FPL; All Kids premium-free up to 147% FPL and sliding-scale premiums above that, with combined Medicaid-plus-CHIP eligibility extending to 318% FPL historically and 247% FPL under 2026 guidance. Immigration status and family assets do not disqualify.
Matchbook: Employees declining dependent coverage on the employer plan should be screened against All Kids thresholds before Matchbook defaults to the family tier. Illinois's broad immigration-neutral eligibility matters for mixed-status households that would otherwise assume no public option exists.
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Education savingsIllinois Bright Start and Bright Directions 529 plans
Illinois taxpayers deduct up to $10,000 ($20,000 MFJ) per year of contributions to Illinois-sponsored 529 plans (Bright Start, Bright Directions, or College Illinois Prepaid). No income cap on the deduction. Non-qualified withdrawals and rollovers to out-of-state 529 plans trigger recapture of previously deducted contributions into Illinois taxable income.
Matchbook: Matchbook favors Illinois-sponsored 529s for Illinois employees because of the state deduction and the rollover recapture rule - a resident who uses an out-of-state 529 loses the 4.95% state benefit and takes recapture risk on any later rollover back. The deduction is claimed on the IL-1040, not through payroll.
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Disability savingsIllinois ABLE (529A)
Illinois's Section 529A program for qualifying individuals with disabilities. 2025 basic annual contribution limit $19,000 (rising to $20,000 for 2026); employed beneficiaries not in an employer retirement plan may contribute an additional $15,060 (2025 poverty-line figure). $500K balance cap; $100K SSI asset-limit exclusion. Illinois taxpayers deduct up to $10,000 ($20,000 MFJ) per year.
Matchbook: FSA or HSA dollars reimburse medical expenses; ABLE covers broader qualified disability expenses including housing, transportation, and assistive technology. When SSI asset limits are in play, Matchbook routes disability-related spend to ABLE first and claims the Illinois deduction.
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