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FHSA Complete Guide: Save Tax-Free for Your First Home

Published May 14, 2026

Key Summary: The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is the most tax-efficient way to save for your first home in Canada. It combines the best features of both the RRSP and TFSA: contributions are tax-deductible ($8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime), growth is tax-free, and qualifying withdrawals are tax-free with no repayment required [1][3]. Available since April 1, 2023, the FHSA is a must-open account for any Canadian resident planning to buy their first home.

What is the FHSA?

The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is a registered savings plan introduced in the 2022 Federal Budget and available to open since April 1, 2023 [3]. It was designed specifically to help first-time home buyers save for a down payment.

What makes the FHSA unique is that no other registered account in Canada offers all three of these tax benefits simultaneously [1][5]:

  1. Tax-deductible contributions (like an RRSP) - your contributions reduce your taxable income
  2. Tax-free growth (like a TFSA) - investments grow without any tax drag
  3. Tax-free withdrawals (like a TFSA) - qualifying withdrawals for a home purchase are completely tax-free

On top of that, unlike the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan, there is no repayment required. The money is yours, free and clear [1][2].

Feature RRSP TFSA FHSA
Tax-deductible contributions Yes No Yes
Tax-free growth Deferred Yes Yes
Tax-free withdrawals No Yes Yes
Repayment required N/A (HBP: Yes) No No

Who can open an FHSA?

To open an FHSA, you must meet all of the following criteria [1][3]:

  1. Canadian tax resident - you must be a resident of Canada for tax purposes
  2. Age 18 to 71 - and at least the age of majority in your province
  3. First-time home buyer - you (and your spouse or common-law partner) must not have lived in a home you owned in the calendar year you open the account or the preceding 4 calendar years
  4. Valid Social Insurance Number (SIN)

Who qualifies as a first-time home buyer?

The definition is specific: you cannot have owned AND lived in a qualifying home as your principal residence in the current year or the 4 previous calendar years [1]. This means:

  • If you owned a rental property but never lived in it, you may still qualify
  • If your spouse or common-law partner owns and lives in a home with you, you do NOT qualify
  • Beneficial ownership of 25% or more counts as ownership

Eligibility by immigration status:

Status Eligible? Notes
Canadian citizen Yes Must meet all other requirements
Permanent resident (PR) Yes Must be a Canadian tax resident
Work permit holder Yes* *Only if you are a tax resident of Canada
International student Possibly Only if considered a Canadian tax resident
Non-resident for tax purposes No Must be a resident of Canada

Key point: Eligibility is based on being a Canadian tax resident, not your immigration status [1]. A person on a work permit who files Canadian taxes and is considered a factual resident can open an FHSA.

[TRANSLATOR: Add country-specific comparison here - e.g., similar first-home savings programs in other countries]

How much can you contribute?

The FHSA contribution limits are straightforward [1][5][7]:

Parameter Amount
Annual contribution limit $8,000
Lifetime contribution limit $40,000
Maximum carry-forward $8,000 (one year of unused room)
Maximum in any single year $16,000 (with full carry-forward)

How does carry-forward work?

If you do not use your full $8,000 in a given year, unused room carries forward to the next year only, capped at $8,000 [1][7].

Example:

  • 2024: You contribute $5,000 (unused: $3,000 carries to 2025)
  • 2025: You can contribute up to $11,000 ($8,000 new + $3,000 carry-forward)
  • 2025: You contribute $6,000 (unused: $5,000, but carry-forward to 2026 is capped at $8,000)

Critical difference from TFSA: room does NOT accumulate before you open

This is one of the most important things to understand about the FHSA [1]:

  • TFSA: Contribution room accumulates automatically from the year you become a tax resident, whether or not you open an account
  • FHSA: Contribution room only starts accumulating AFTER you open the account

If you wait 3 years to open your FHSA, you permanently lose $24,000 in potential contribution room (3 x $8,000). You cannot catch up. The maximum carry-forward is always capped at $8,000 (one year) [1][7].

Pro tip: Open an FHSA as early as possible, even if you only contribute $1. Starting the clock is what matters.

What are the tax benefits?

Going in: tax-deductible contributions

Every dollar you contribute to your FHSA reduces your taxable income, just like RRSP contributions [1][3]. If you contribute the maximum $8,000 per year, your tax savings depend on your marginal tax rate:

Taxable Income (approx.) Combined Marginal Rate (Federal + BC) Tax Saved per $8,000 5-Year Savings ($40,000)
$40,000 ~22.7% ~$1,816 ~$9,080
$55,000 ~28.2% ~$2,256 ~$11,280
$75,000 ~31.0% ~$2,480 ~$12,400
$100,000 ~33.3% ~$2,664 ~$13,320
$150,000 ~40.7% ~$3,256 ~$16,280
$220,000+ ~53.5% ~$4,280 ~$21,400

Rates are approximate combined federal + BC provincial marginal rates for 2025. Rates vary by province.

Key insight: The higher your income, the more valuable the FHSA deduction becomes. A high-income earner saving at a 53.5% marginal rate who later withdraws at 0% effectively gets a 53.5% boost from the government [5][6].

You can also defer the deduction to a future year when your income is higher, maximizing the benefit [1].

🧮 Want to see your exact tax savings? Use our 💰 Tax Calculator to estimate your FHSA deduction benefit based on your income and province.

While growing: completely tax-free

All investment gains inside the FHSA - capital gains, dividends, interest - grow completely tax-free [1][5]. There is zero tax on growth at any point, as long as you eventually make a qualifying withdrawal or transfer to an RRSP.

Coming out: tax-free qualifying withdrawals

When you withdraw funds to buy a qualifying first home, you pay zero tax. No withholding tax is applied, and no repayment is required [1][2]. This is the key difference from the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan, which requires repayment over 15 years.

How does the FHSA compare to other options for buying a home?

FHSA vs RRSP Home Buyers' Plan vs TFSA

Feature FHSA RRSP HBP TFSA
Tax deduction on contribution Yes Yes No
Tax-free growth Yes Yes (until withdrawal) Yes
Tax-free withdrawal for home Yes Yes (but must repay) Yes
Repayment required No Yes - 1/15th per year over 15 years No
Maximum for home purchase $40,000 $60,000 No limit
Must be first-time buyer Yes Yes (4-year rule) No
Flexibility for other uses Limited Retirement savings Full flexibility
Account duration 15 years max Lifetime Lifetime

The $100,000 combined strategy (FHSA + HBP)

Here is one of the most powerful strategies for first-time home buyers in Canada: you can use FHSA AND the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan together for the same home purchase [4][5][7].

For a single person:

Source Maximum Tax on Withdrawal Repayment
FHSA $40,000 $0 None
RRSP HBP $60,000 $0 (if repaid on schedule) 15 years
TFSA No limit* $0 None
Combined $100,000+

For a couple (both first-time buyers):

Source Maximum Notes
2x FHSA $80,000 No repayment
2x RRSP HBP $120,000 Repay over 15 years
2x TFSA No limit* Fully flexible
Combined $200,000+

*TFSA depends on accumulated contribution room

The HBP withdrawal limit was increased from $35,000 to $60,000 effective April 16, 2024 [4], making this combined strategy even more powerful.

Dollar-for-dollar comparison

Scenario: Person earning $80,000/year, contributing $8,000/year for 5 years, 7% annual return

Account Total Contributed Tax Savings (Going In) Growth (5 yrs) Tax on Withdrawal Net Value Repayment?
FHSA $40,000 ~$12,400 ~$6,300 $0 ~$58,700 No
RRSP (HBP) $40,000 ~$12,400 ~$6,300 $0 initially ~$46,300 (must repay $40K) Yes, 15 years
TFSA $40,000 $0 ~$6,300 $0 ~$46,300 No
Non-registered $40,000 $0 ~$4,700 (after tax) Capital gains tax ~$44,700 No

Winner: FHSA - You get the tax deduction AND keep all the money with zero repayment [5][6].

What is the relationship between FHSA and the Home Buyers' Plan (HBP)?

The FHSA and HBP are separate programs that complement each other [4][7]:

FHSA:

  • Standalone registered account
  • $40,000 lifetime max
  • No repayment required
  • Must be a first-time buyer to open

HBP (Home Buyers' Plan):

  • A withdrawal program from your RRSP
  • Up to $60,000 withdrawal limit (increased from $35,000 in April 2024) [4]
  • Must repay 1/15th per year for 15 years back into your RRSP
  • If you miss a payment, that year's portion is added to your taxable income

Using both together: You can maximize your tax-advantaged home buying funds by contributing to both an FHSA and an RRSP simultaneously. At purchase time, withdraw from your FHSA (no repayment) and use the HBP for additional funds (repay over 15 years). This gives you up to $100,000 per person in tax-advantaged withdrawals [5][7].

Key difference: If you miss an HBP repayment, that amount becomes taxable income. FHSA has no such risk because there is nothing to repay.

What are the rules for qualifying withdrawals?

To make a tax-free qualifying withdrawal, you must meet all of these conditions [1][2]:

  1. Be a first-time home buyer at the time of withdrawal
  2. Have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home in Canada
  3. Complete the purchase by October 1 of the year after the withdrawal
  4. Intend to occupy the home as your principal residence within one year of purchase
  5. Be a resident of Canada from the time of withdrawal until the home purchase

What counts as a qualifying home?

A qualifying home is a housing unit located in Canada that you intend to occupy as your principal residence within one year [1][2]. This includes:

  • Single-family homes
  • Condominiums
  • Townhouses
  • Duplexes or triplexes (if you live in one unit)
  • Mobile homes
  • Shares in a co-operative housing corporation
  • Newly built or existing homes

Not qualifying: investment properties you will not live in, homes outside Canada, and properties where you do not intend to be the primary resident [2].

Timeline for a qualifying withdrawal

Step Deadline
Sign a written agreement to buy/build Before or at time of withdrawal
Make withdrawal from FHSA Any time before closing
Complete purchase (closing) By October 1 of the year after withdrawal
Move into the home Within 1 year of buying/building
Close remaining FHSA balance By December 31 of the year after first qualifying withdrawal

After your first qualifying withdrawal

Once you make your first qualifying withdrawal [1][2]:

  • No more contributions are allowed
  • You must close the FHSA by December 31 of the following year
  • Any remaining balance must be transferred to an RRSP/RRIF or withdrawn (taxed)
  • You can make partial withdrawals (you do not need to take everything at once)

What happens if you do not buy a home?

If you decide not to purchase a home, or your 15-year account deadline arrives, you have two options [1][2]:

Option 1: Transfer to RRSP (recommended)

  • Transfer your FHSA balance to your RRSP or RRIF
  • The transfer is completely tax-free
  • Does NOT use any of your RRSP contribution room [1][7]
  • Funds are then subject to normal RRSP rules

Option 2: Taxable withdrawal

  • Withdraw funds as cash
  • The full withdrawal amount is added to your taxable income for the year
  • Withholding tax is deducted at source: 10% (up to $5,000), 20% ($5,001-$15,000), 30% (over $15,000) [2]
  • No contribution room is restored

The RRSP transfer option is almost always better because it preserves the tax-deferred status of your savings [5][7].

How long can you keep an FHSA?

The maximum account duration is 15 years from the year you open your first FHSA, or December 31 of the year you turn 71, whichever comes first [1][3].

Example: If you opened your FHSA in 2023, the deadline is December 31, 2038. After this date, you cannot make qualifying withdrawals. Any remaining funds must be transferred to an RRSP/RRIF or withdrawn (taxed).

This is another reason to open early: the 15-year clock starts ticking the moment you open the account, regardless of whether you contribute [1].

What can you invest inside an FHSA?

The FHSA holds the same types of qualified investments as a TFSA or RRSP [1][5]:

  • Stocks (Canadian and US-listed on designated exchanges)
  • Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs)
  • Mutual funds
  • Bonds
  • GICs (Guaranteed Investment Certificates)
  • Cash and savings deposits

Investment strategy considerations:

Since the FHSA has a relatively short time horizon (most people use it within 5-10 years), your investment approach should reflect your timeline [5]:

  • Buying in 1-3 years: GICs, high-interest savings, short-term bond ETFs
  • Buying in 3-5 years: Balanced portfolio (mix of bonds and equities)
  • Buying in 5-10+ years: Growth-oriented portfolio (heavier on equities)

US dividend withholding tax: Like the TFSA, the FHSA is not recognized by the US IRS under the Canada-US Tax Treaty [6]. US dividends paid into an FHSA face a permanent 15% withholding tax. For FHSA holdings, prefer Canadian equities, GICs, and growth-oriented investments with minimal US dividends.

How to open an FHSA

Where to open

Most major Canadian financial institutions now offer FHSA accounts [5][7]:

Provider Type Notable Features
Wealthsimple Online brokerage Commission-free, easy app, managed option
Questrade Online brokerage Free ETF purchases, wide selection
RBC Direct Investing Bank brokerage Full-service, branch support
TD Direct Investing Bank brokerage Comprehensive platform
BMO InvestorLine Bank brokerage Bank integration
National Bank Bank brokerage Commission-free stocks/ETFs
CIBC Investor's Edge Bank brokerage Low commissions

If you are considering Wealthsimple, you can sign up for Wealthsimple here. Both you and the referrer receive a $25 CAD cash bonus when you open an account and meet the qualifying conditions.

Disclosure: The Wealthsimple link above is a referral link. If you sign up and meet Wealthsimple's referral conditions, both parties receive a $25 CAD cash bonus. We only recommend services we believe are genuinely useful.

Steps to open

  1. Confirm eligibility - Age 18-71, Canadian tax resident, first-time home buyer
  2. Choose a provider - Compare fees, investment options, and user experience
  3. Open the account - Provide your SIN, personal information, and sign a declaration of eligibility
  4. Fund the account - Transfer up to $8,000 (or more with carry-forward)
  5. Invest the funds - Choose investments appropriate for your timeline
  6. Claim the deduction - Report contributions on your tax return using Schedule 15

What are the common mistakes to avoid?

1. Not opening early enough

The biggest mistake is waiting. Since carry-forward room only starts accumulating after you open the account, every year you delay is $8,000 in permanently lost contribution room [1][7]. Open with even $1 if you need to.

2. Over-contributing

The penalty is 1% per month on the excess amount until removed [1][5]. Keep careful track of your contributions, including any carry-forward.

3. Forgetting the spousal rule

If your spouse or common-law partner owns a home you live in, you are NOT eligible to open an FHSA [1]. This catches people who think "I personally do not own a home" but live in their partner's property.

4. Missing the 15-year deadline

The clock starts when you open your first FHSA. If you opened in 2023, your deadline is December 31, 2038. After this date, qualifying withdrawals are no longer possible [1][2].

5. Not claiming the tax deduction

FHSA contributions are deductible, but you must actually claim them on your tax return (Schedule 15). You can defer the deduction to a future year if you expect higher income later [1].

6. Contributing after a qualifying withdrawal

Once you make your first qualifying withdrawal, no more contributions are allowed [1][2]. Plan your contribution timing carefully.

7. Not knowing about the RRSP transfer option

If you do not buy a home, transferring to an RRSP is tax-free and does not use your RRSP room [1][7]. Many people make a taxable withdrawal unnecessarily when the RRSP transfer is the better option.

8. Assuming carry-forward accumulates before opening

Unlike the TFSA, you cannot "catch up" years before you had an FHSA. The maximum catch-up is always one year ($8,000) [1].

Cross-border tax implications

What happens if you become a non-resident?

If you leave Canada while holding an FHSA [1][2]:

  • You cannot make new contributions while non-resident
  • You must be a resident of Canada from the time of withdrawal until the home purchase to make a qualifying withdrawal
  • If you leave before buying, you may need to transfer to an RRSP (tax-free) or make a taxable withdrawal
  • The 15-year account limit still applies regardless of residency changes

US tax residents

Like the TFSA, the FHSA is not recognized by the US IRS. If you are a US person (citizen or green card holder) living in Canada, consult a cross-border tax specialist before opening an FHSA. The US may require reporting of FHSA income and the account itself on forms such as FBAR and Form 3520 [6].

FHSA for newcomers and immigrants

If you recently arrived in Canada and plan to eventually buy your first home, the FHSA is one of the first accounts you should open [1]:

Step 1: Get your SIN - Apply at a Service Canada office or online as soon as possible.

Step 2: Open the FHSA immediately - Even if you can only put in $1. Starting the clock for carry-forward room is what matters. Every year you wait costs you $8,000 in potential room that you can never get back.

Step 3: Open a TFSA at your convenience - Unlike the FHSA, TFSA room accumulates automatically from the year you become a tax resident. There is no rush.

Why this order matters:

Data Currency: Figures, rates, and thresholds in this guide are based on the most recent verified data (2025-2026). Policy details are reviewed regularly, but always confirm current amounts at the linked official sources before making decisions.

  • Wait 3 years to open FHSA = $24,000 permanently lost
  • Wait 3 years to open TFSA = $0 lost (room is waiting for you)

Not sure if you will buy? Open it anyway. If you never buy a home, you can transfer the balance to an RRSP tax-free without using any RRSP room. There is no downside to opening early [1][7].

Key Takeaways

  • The FHSA is the best of both RRSP and TFSA: tax-deductible contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free withdrawals with no repayment
  • Annual limit is $8,000, lifetime limit is $40,000
  • Open your FHSA as early as possible - contribution room does NOT accumulate before you open the account
  • You can use FHSA ($40,000) + RRSP HBP ($60,000) together for up to $100,000 per person in tax-advantaged home buying funds
  • If you never buy a home, transfer to RRSP tax-free (does not use RRSP room)
  • Available to any Canadian tax resident aged 18-71 who is a first-time home buyer, including PR holders and work permit holders

FAQ

What is the FHSA contribution limit? The annual limit is $8,000, with a lifetime maximum of $40,000. You can carry forward up to $8,000 of unused room to the next year, making the maximum contribution in a single year $16,000 [1].

Can permanent residents and work permit holders open an FHSA? Yes. Eligibility is based on being a Canadian tax resident, not immigration status. PR holders and work permit holders who are tax residents of Canada can open an FHSA [1][3].

Can I use FHSA and the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan together? Yes. You can withdraw up to $40,000 from your FHSA (no repayment) and up to $60,000 from your RRSP under the Home Buyers' Plan (repay over 15 years) for the same home purchase [4][5][7].

What happens if I never buy a home? You can transfer your FHSA balance to an RRSP or RRIF tax-free without using any RRSP contribution room. Alternatively, you can withdraw the funds, but the full amount becomes taxable income [1][2].

Do I need to repay FHSA withdrawals like the Home Buyers' Plan? No. Qualifying FHSA withdrawals are completely tax-free with zero repayment required [1][2].

How long can I keep an FHSA open? A maximum of 15 years from the year you open your first FHSA, or until December 31 of the year you turn 71, whichever comes first [1][3].

Does FHSA contribution room accumulate before I open the account? No. Unlike the TFSA, FHSA room only starts accumulating after you open the account. Open as early as possible, even with $1 [1][7].

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Disclaimer

This is not financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized recommendations.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional tax, legal, or immigration advice. Information may change over time. For decisions involving taxes, immigration, or legal matters, please consult official government sources or a qualified professional.

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