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Second Chance

How to Successfully Re-Apply for the Disability Tax Credit After Being Denied

A DTC denial is not the end of the road. Most denials are not because the person doesn't qualify — they happen because the application didn't communicate the functional impact of the condition in the language CRA needs to see. A well-prepared re-application can and does succeed.

Timing

When Can You Re-Apply After a DTC Denial?

There is no mandatory waiting period after a DTC denial. You can re-apply at any time, provided you have new or additional information to support your application. Simply resubmitting the same T2201 form without changes is unlikely to produce a different result.

If you are within 90 days of the denial notice, you also have the option to file a formal Notice of Objection — which is a different process from re-applying. My Benefits Canada can advise you on which approach is more appropriate for your situation.

If your condition has worsened since the original application, or if you have new medical documentation that better describes the functional impact of your condition, a re-application is often the most direct path forward.

Key Differences

What Changes Between a First Application and a Re-Application?

The T2201 Must Be Rewritten

The most common reason for denial is vague or clinical language on the T2201. A successful re-application requires the form to be rewritten using CRA-aligned functional language — describing how your condition restricts your ability to perform specific daily activities, not just what the diagnosis is.

Medical Documentation Must Be Strengthened

If the original application lacked supporting clinical records, the re-application should include detailed notes from your medical practitioner, therapy logs, prescription records, and any assessments that document the functional impact of your condition.

The Denial Reason Must Be Addressed Directly

CRA's denial letter contains specific reasons for the decision. A strong re-application addresses each of those reasons directly — either by providing new information or by clarifying how the original information meets the eligibility criteria.

A Cover Letter Can Make the Difference

Including a well-structured cover letter that summarizes the functional impact of your condition and explains how the re-application addresses the prior denial can significantly improve the outcome.

Documentation

New Medical Evidence Requirements

In many cases, the original medical evidence is sufficient — the problem was how it was described on the T2201. However, stronger documentation always improves the outcome. The following types of evidence are most effective in a re-application:

  • Updated clinical notes documenting the current severity of your condition
  • A functional assessment from an occupational therapist or specialist
  • A revised T2201 with detailed, activity-specific functional impact descriptions
  • Therapy records, prescription logs, or hospital admission records
  • A personal statement describing your daily limitations in concrete terms
  • Supporting statements from family members or caregivers who assist you daily

The Functional Language Rule

CRA evaluates functional impact, not diagnosis. The T2201 must describe how your condition restricts your ability to perform specific basic activities of daily living — walking, dressing, feeding, speaking, hearing, seeing, or mental functions — in concrete, measurable terms. "Patient has ADHD" is not sufficient. "Patient requires constant one-on-one supervision to complete basic daily tasks and cannot be left unsupervised for more than 10 minutes" is the level of specificity CRA needs.

Our Process

How My Benefits Canada Builds a Winning Re-Application

01

Review the Denial Letter

CRA's denial letter specifies the reason for the decision. Understanding exactly what CRA found insufficient is the foundation of a successful re-application. My Benefits Canada reviews denial letters at no cost.

02

Coordinate With Your Medical Practitioner

We work directly with your doctor, psychologist, or specialist to obtain a revised or supplementary T2201 that uses precise, CRA-aligned functional language. We provide your practitioner with a structured briefing to make this process efficient.

03

Prepare and Submit the Re-Application

We prepare the complete re-application package — including the revised T2201, supporting documentation, and cover letter — and submit it to CRA on your behalf.

04

Monitor and Follow Up

We monitor the status of your re-application with CRA and follow up as needed. If CRA requests additional information, we respond promptly and accurately.

A Denial Is Not the Final Word

My Benefits Canada reviews denied applications at no additional cost. Our fee is 25% of retroactive refunds only — collected after CRA approves your re-application. If the re-application is not approved, you pay nothing.

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