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FHSA Guide Canada 2026 | First Home Savings Account Rules, Limits & Strategies

Updated

The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is the most powerful savings tool ever created for Canadian first-time home buyers. Launched in 2023, it lets you deduct contributions from your income (like an RRSP), grow investments tax-free, and withdraw everything tax-free for a qualifying home purchase (like a TFSA). No other account in Canada gives you both a tax deduction going in and tax-free withdrawals coming out.

This guide covers everything: eligibility, contribution limits, investment strategies, withdrawal rules, and how to combine the FHSA with the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan for maximum benefit.

How the FHSA Works

FeatureDetails
Annual contribution limit$8,000
Lifetime contribution limit$40,000
Tax deduction on contributionsYes (like RRSP)
Tax-free growthYes (like TFSA)
Tax-free withdrawal for homeYes
Carry forward unused roomYes (max $8,000/year)
Account lifespan15 years or until age 71
Repayment requiredNo (unlike RRSP HBP)

The FHSA Advantage Over Other Options

FeatureFHSARRSP (HBP)TFSA
Tax deduction on contributions
Tax-free growth✅ (deferred)
Tax-free withdrawal for home❌ (must repay)
Maximum for home purchase$40,000$60,000No limit
Repayment requiredNoYes (15 years)No

The FHSA is strictly better than the RRSP HBP for down payment savings because you never have to repay it. Use both for maximum buying power.

Eligibility

To open an FHSA, you must meet all of these criteria:

  • Canadian resident
  • At least 18 years old (19 in some provinces)
  • First-time home buyer: you have not lived in a home owned by you or your spouse/common-law partner as your principal residence in the current year or any of the four preceding calendar years

Common Eligibility Questions

Contribution Rules

Annual and Lifetime Limits

YearAnnual LimitCarry ForwardMax Contribution That Year
Year 1$8,000$0$8,000
Year 2 (contributed $8K in Y1)$8,000$0$8,000
Year 2 (contributed $5K in Y1)$8,000$3,000$11,000
Year 2 (contributed $0 in Y1)$8,000$8,000$16,000

Key rules:

  • Carry forward accumulates only after you open the account — open early even with $0 to start the clock
  • Maximum carry forward in any single year is $8,000 (you cannot dump $40,000 in at once even with years of unused room)
  • Contributions to a spouse’s FHSA are not allowed — each person must contribute to their own

Deep dives:

Tax Benefits

Tax Deduction

FHSA contributions reduce your taxable income, just like RRSP contributions. At a 30% marginal tax rate, an $8,000 contribution saves you $2,400 in taxes.

Marginal Tax RateTax Savings on $8,000 Contribution
20%$1,600
30%$2,400
40%$3,200
50%$4,000

You can also defer the deduction to a future higher-income year — the contribution still counts, but you claim the deduction later.

Tax-Free Growth

All investment returns inside the FHSA — interest, dividends, capital gains — are completely tax-free. This is identical to a TFSA.

Tax-Free Withdrawal

When you withdraw for a qualifying home purchase, the entire amount — contributions plus growth — comes out tax-free. There is no repayment obligation.

Investment Options

Your FHSA can hold the same investments as a TFSA or RRSP:

InvestmentSuitabilityNotes
High-interest savings1–2 year timelineSafe, guaranteed
GICs2–5 year timelineLocked in but higher rate
Bond ETFs (ZAG, XBB)3–5 year timelineSome volatility
Balanced ETFs (XBAL, VBAL)5+ year timelineModerate growth
All-equity ETFs (XEQT, VEQT)7+ year timelineMaximum growth, most volatile

Rule of thumb: Match your investment to your home-buying timeline. If you are buying within 2–3 years, stick to GICs or a HISA. If you have 5+ years, an ETF portfolio can grow faster.

Full guide: FHSA Investment Options — What to Hold

Withdrawal Rules

Qualifying Withdrawal (Tax-Free)

To withdraw tax-free, you must:

  1. Have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home
  2. Be a first-time home buyer at the time of withdrawal
  3. Be a Canadian resident
  4. Intend to live in the home as your principal place of residence within one year of buying or building it

You do not need to close the account to make a withdrawal. You can make partial withdrawals, though any remaining funds must be withdrawn, transferred, or the account closed within one year of the first qualifying withdrawal.

Full details: FHSA Withdrawal Rules

What If You Don’t Buy a Home?

If you never buy a qualifying home, you have three options:

OptionWhat Happens
Transfer to RRSP/RRIFTax-free transfer (does not use RRSP room)
Withdraw as cashTaxed as income (like RRSP withdrawal)
Account expiresMust choose by age 71 or 15 years after opening

Transferring to an RRSP is the best fallback — your money continues growing tax-deferred, and the transfer does not reduce your RRSP contribution room.

Full guide: What Happens to FHSA If You Don’t Buy

What If You Withdraw for Something Other Than a Home?

Non-qualifying withdrawals are taxed as income. Avoid this — transfer to RRSP instead.

Details: What Happens If You Withdraw FHSA Not for Home

FHSA Strategies

Strategy 1: Open Immediately (Even with $0)

The FHSA carry-forward clock starts when you open the account, not when you contribute. Open an FHSA today with even $1 to start accumulating room.

Why it matters: When Should I Open an FHSA?

Strategy 2: FHSA + RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan

You can use both programs for the same purchase:

SourceMaximumRepaymentTax-Free?
FHSA$40,000NoneYes
RRSP HBP$60,00015 yearsYes (but must repay)
Combined (per person)$100,000PartialYes
Combined (couple)$200,000PartialYes

For a couple, that is up to $200,000 in tax-advantaged down payment funds.

Full strategy: Using FHSA and RRSP HBP at the Same Time

Strategy 3: FHSA for Couples

Both partners can each open their own FHSA, saving a combined $80,000 ($40,000 each). Coordinate contributions to maximize your combined tax deductions — the higher-income partner should prioritize their FHSA first for the larger tax benefit.

Full guide: FHSA for Couples

Strategy 4: Use It as a Second RRSP

If you’re not sure whether you’ll buy a home, the FHSA is still worth opening. Worst case, you transfer the funds to your RRSP tax-free when the account expires — it acts as bonus RRSP room on top of your regular limit.

Where to Open an FHSA

ProviderFHSA?Investment OptionsNotes
WealthsimpleStocks, ETFs, GICs$0 commissions
QuestradeStocks, ETFs, GICsFree ETF purchases
EQ BankGICs, savingsNo self-directed investing
RBCFull rangeBank brokerage
TDFull rangeBank brokerage
BMOFull rangeBank brokerage

Comparison: Best FHSA Accounts in Canada

FHSA vs TFSA vs RRSP

Choosing where to put your money depends on your goals:

FactorFHSATFSARRSP
Tax deduction
Tax-free growthTax-deferred
Tax-free home withdrawal❌ (HBP requires repayment)
Available for any purpose❌ (home only)✅ (with tax)
Annual limit$8,000$7,000 (2025+)18% of income
Lifetime limit$40,000CumulativeCumulative

If you plan to buy a home: FHSA first, then TFSA, then RRSP HBP If you’re unsure: FHSA (fallback to RRSP), then TFSA

Full comparison: FHSA vs TFSA vs RRSP

FHSA vs RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan

FeatureFHSARRSP HBP
Maximum$40,000$60,000
RepaymentNone15 years
Annual contribution room$8,00018% of income
If you don’t buyTransfer to RRSPN/A (money stays in RRSP)
Can use both?YesYes

Detailed comparison: FHSA vs RRSP HBP

How to Report the FHSA on Your Tax Return

Claiming the contribution deduction

StepWhat to Do
1Receive your FHSA contribution receipt (RC725) from your financial institution by late February
2Report contributions on Schedule 15 — FHSA Contributions, Transfers and Activities
3Claim the deduction on Line 20805 of your T1 return
4You can choose to carry forward the deduction to a future year if you expect higher income later

Reporting a qualifying withdrawal

StepWhat to Do
1Receive Form RC726 — First Home Savings Account (FHSA) Annual Information Return from your issuer
2Report the withdrawal on Schedule 15
3Qualifying withdrawals are not included in income — no tax owing
4You do not need to repay the amount (unlike the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan)

Reporting a non-qualifying withdrawal

If you withdraw funds for something other than a qualifying home purchase:

StepWhat to Do
1The withdrawal is included in your income for the year
2Reported on your T4FHSA slip
3Taxed at your marginal rate — avoid this by transferring to your RRSP instead

Deferring the deduction

You are not required to claim the FHSA deduction in the year of contribution. This is useful if you expect your income (and marginal tax rate) to increase. Contribute now to start the tax-free growth, but defer the deduction to a higher-income year for a larger tax savings.

YearContributionIncomeMarginal RateDeduction ClaimedTax Savings
2026$8,000$55,00030%$0 (deferred)$0
2027$8,000$90,00043%$16,000 (2 years)$6,880

By deferring, you save $6,880 instead of $4,800 (if claimed at 30%).

FHSA Growth Projections

How much could your FHSA be worth, depending on your investment and timeline?

Years ContributingTotal ContributedGIC (4%)Balanced ETF (5.5%)Equity ETF (7%)
3 years$24,000$25,500$25,900$26,400
5 years$40,000$43,300$44,700$46,300
7 years$40,000$47,200$49,800$52,700
10 years$40,000$53,100$58,300$64,200
15 years$40,000$64,600$76,200$90,500

Key insight: Even after you hit the $40,000 contribution limit (year 5), the tax-free growth continues. An FHSA left growing for 15 years at 7% turns $40,000 into $90,500 — all tax-free at withdrawal.

Use the FHSA Calculator for personalized projections.

The FHSA in Quebec (CELIAPP)

In Quebec, the FHSA is called the CELIAPP (Compte d’épargne libre d’impôt pour l’achat d’une première propriété). The rules are identical to the federal FHSA, but Quebec has its own provincial tax deduction:

FeatureFederalQuebec (Provincial)
Account nameFHSACELIAPP
Contribution limit$8,000/year, $40,000 lifetimeSame
Tax deductionFederal deduction (Line 20805)Quebec deduction (Line 250)
Tax-free withdrawalYesYes
Combined tax savings on $8,000 (at ~47% combined rate)~$1,200 federal~$1,560 Quebec

Quebec residents benefit from both the federal and provincial deduction, making the CELIAPP/FHSA even more valuable in Quebec than in other provinces.

Important Deadlines

DeadlineDetails
FHSA Opening DeadlineMust open before December 31, 2024 to get full carry-forward benefits for 2025
FHSA Qualifying Purchase RulesMust have written agreement; must occupy within 1 year
Account expiry15 years after opening or December 31 of the year you turn 71

FHSA Calculator

Estimate how much your FHSA will be worth at purchase time: FHSA Calculator

All FHSA Articles

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