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First-Time Home Buyer's Tax Credit (HBTC) Canada 2026: How to Claim $10,000

Updated

The First-Time Home Buyer’s Tax Credit (HBTC) puts $1,500 back in your pocket after buying your first home in Canada. It is one of the simplest federal incentives to claim — you add one line to your tax return and the credit reduces your federal tax owed. Here is everything you need to know.

How the HBTC works

The HBTC is a non-refundable tax credit worth $10,000, which translates to a $1,500 tax reduction at the 15% federal tax rate.

DetailAmount
Credit amount$10,000
Tax savings (15% federal rate)$1,500
Where to claimLine 31270 of your T1 return
When to claimTax return for the year you purchased the home
Refundable?No — reduces tax owing, does not generate a refund if you owe nothing

Non-refundable means the credit can reduce your federal tax to zero but will not produce a refund beyond that. If your total federal tax for the year is less than $1,500, you will receive less than the full benefit.

Who qualifies

You must meet all of the following criteria:

  1. First-time buyer status. Neither you nor your spouse/common-law partner owned and occupied a home as a principal residence during the year of purchase or the four preceding calendar years.
  2. Qualifying home. The property is in Canada and is a detached house, semi-detached, townhouse, condominium, mobile home, or a share in a co-operative housing corporation.
  3. Registered on title. The home is registered in your name or your spouse/partner’s name (or both) in the applicable land registry.
  4. Intent to occupy. You intend to live in the home as your principal residence within one year of purchase.

Disability exception

If you or a related person with a disability is purchasing a home to provide more accessible housing, you do not need to be a first-time buyer. The home must be purchased to allow the person with a disability to live in a more accessible dwelling.

How to claim the HBTC on your tax return

StepWhat to Do
1Complete your T1 tax return for the year you purchased the home
2Enter $10,000 on Line 31270 — “Home buyers’ amount”
3The $1,500 credit is calculated automatically and reduces your federal tax
4If filing jointly with a spouse, decide how to split the $10,000 (cannot exceed $10,000 combined)

You do not need to submit proof of purchase with your return, but keep your agreement of purchase and sale, closing documents, and title registration in case the CRA requests verification.

Splitting the credit with your spouse

If you bought the home with your spouse or common-law partner, you can divide the $10,000 however you want — as long as the total claimed between both returns does not exceed $10,000.

ScenarioBest Split
Both partners have similar incomes and owe federal tax$5,000 each ($750 savings each)
One partner has low income / low tax owingFull $10,000 to the higher-income partner
One partner doesn’t qualify as first-time buyerFull $10,000 to the qualifying partner

How the HBTC stacks with other first-time buyer programs

The HBTC is just one of several incentives available to Canadian first-time buyers. These programs are not mutually exclusive — you can use all of them on the same purchase.

ProgramBenefitCan You Stack with HBTC?
HBTC (this article)$1,500 tax credit
FHSATax-deductible contributions + tax-free withdrawals for down payment✅ Yes
RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP)Withdraw up to $60,000 from RRSP tax-free for down payment✅ Yes
GST/HST New Housing RebateRebate on GST/HST paid on new construction or renovated homes✅ Yes
Provincial land transfer tax rebateVaries — ON, BC, PEI offer first-time buyer rebates✅ Yes

Example: maximum first-time buyer benefits stacked

IncentiveBenefit
FHSAUp to $40,000 in tax-deductible, tax-free down payment savings
RRSP HBPUp to $60,000 tax-free RRSP withdrawal (couple: $120,000)
HBTC$1,500 federal tax credit
Ontario land transfer tax rebateUp to $4,000 (on homes up to $368,000)
Toronto municipal LTT rebateUp to $4,475 (Toronto only)
Total potential benefits$40,000+ in tax-sheltered savings, $1,500 credit, up to $8,475 in LTT rebates

Provincial first-time buyer tax credits and rebates

Several provinces offer their own first-time buyer credits or rebates in addition to the federal HBTC.

ProvinceProgramBenefit
OntarioLand transfer tax rebateUp to $4,000 on the provincial portion
British ColumbiaProperty transfer tax exemptionFull exemption on homes up to $500,000; partial to $525,000
PEIReal property transfer tax rebateFirst-time buyers exempt from 1% transfer tax
TorontoMunicipal LTT rebateUp to $4,475
QuebecNo specific FTHB tax credit— (but lower notary/transfer costs generally)
AlbertaNo land transfer tax existsNo transfer tax for anyone
SaskatchewanNo specific FTHB tax credit
ManitobaNo specific FTHB tax credit— (but land transfer tax is lower than ON/BC)

For detailed province-by-province guides, see our first-time home buyer provincial pages.

Common questions

Can I claim the HBTC on a cottage or vacation property? Only if you intend to make it your principal residence within one year of purchase. Investment or vacation properties that you will not live in do not qualify.

Can I claim the HBTC if I buy a home but don’t move in for 8 months? Yes — you have one year from the date of purchase to move in. Delays due to renovations or a current lease ending are fine as long as you occupy within 12 months.

What if I bought in December but didn’t close until January? The HBTC is claimed in the year the title transfers (closing date), not the date you signed the agreement of purchase and sale.

Can I claim the HBTC and also deduct moving expenses? Yes, if you moved at least 40 km closer to a new workplace. The two claims are independent.

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