TFSA basics for home buyers
The Tax-Free Savings Account is Canada’s most flexible savings vehicle. For home buyers, the key advantages are:
- No restrictions on withdrawal purpose — unlike the RRSP HBP, you don’t need to be a first-time buyer.
- No withdrawal limit — take out as much as you need.
- No repayment requirement — unlike the HBP’s 15-year repayment schedule.
- Contribution room recovers — restored on January 1 of the following year.
- All growth is tax-free — no tax on interest, dividends, or capital gains inside the account.
- Withdrawals are not taxable income — they don’t affect OAS, GIS, or other income-tested benefits.
TFSA contribution room (2009–2026)
| Year | Annual room | Cumulative (if never contributed) |
|---|---|---|
| 2009–2012 | $5,000/year | $20,000 |
| 2013–2014 | $5,500/year | $31,000 |
| 2015 | $10,000 | $41,000 |
| 2016–2018 | $5,500/year | $57,500 |
| 2019–2022 | $6,000/year | $81,500 |
| 2023 | $6,500 | $88,000 |
| 2024 | $7,000 | $95,000 |
| 2025 | $7,000 | $102,000 |
| 2026 | $7,000 | $109,000 |
If you turned 18 in 2009 or earlier and never contributed, your total room is $109,000 as of 2026. Each year adds the new annual amount. Room also grows by the amount of any prior-year withdrawals.
How TFSA withdrawals work for a down payment
The mechanics
- Request a withdrawal from your TFSA — online, in-branch, or via your brokerage.
- Receive the funds — deposited to your bank account within 1–5 business days (cash) or according to your investment liquidation timeline.
- Use the funds for anything — down payment, closing costs, furniture, doesn’t matter.
- No tax consequence — the withdrawal is not reported as income. You do not need to report it on your tax return.
- Contribution room is restored on January 1 of the following year.
Worked example
| Detail | Amount |
|---|---|
| TFSA balance (January 2026) | $85,000 |
| Withdrawal for down payment (March 2026) | $60,000 |
| TFSA balance after withdrawal | $25,000 |
| Remaining 2026 contribution room | $0 (was already maxed) |
| January 1, 2027 | |
| Restored room from withdrawal | +$60,000 |
| New 2027 annual room | +$7,000 (estimated) |
| Total available contribution room (2027) | $67,000 |
Critical rule: Do not re-contribute in the same calendar year as the withdrawal (unless you have unused room from prior years). Re-contributing too early results in an over-contribution, which is penalized at 1% per month on the excess.
Investment considerations before withdrawing
Timing your liquidation
If your TFSA holds investments (not just cash), you need to plan the liquidation:
| Investment | Liquidation time | Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| HISA / cash | Immediate | No market risk |
| GIC | At maturity (or early redemption penalty) | Plan around maturity dates |
| Bond ETFs | 1–3 business days | May sell at a loss if interest rates have risen |
| Equity ETFs / stocks | 1–3 business days | Subject to current market prices |
Strategy: Begin shifting to cash or HISA 6–12 months before you plan to withdraw for a down payment. This eliminates market risk — you don’t want your down payment to drop 15% because of a market correction the month before closing.
What about investment gains inside the TFSA?
All gains are permanently tax-free. If you contributed $50,000 and it grew to $85,000, you can withdraw the full $85,000 tax-free. The contribution room restored is based on the amount withdrawn, not the original contribution — so you get $85,000 in restored room, which is a bonus.
TFSA vs. FHSA vs. RRSP HBP
Feature comparison
| Feature | TFSA | FHSA | RRSP HBP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who can use it? | Anyone 18+ | First-time buyers only | First-time buyers only |
| Contribution limit | $7,000/year (2026) | $8,000/year ($40,000 lifetime) | Based on RRSP room |
| Tax deduction on contribution? | No | Yes | Yes |
| Tax-free growth? | Yes | Yes | Tax-deferred |
| Tax on withdrawal? | No | No (for qualifying home purchase) | No (if repaid on schedule) |
| Must repay withdrawal? | No | No | Yes — over 15 years |
| Max withdrawal for home | Unlimited | $40,000 + growth | $60,000 |
| First-time buyer requirement? | No | Yes | Yes |
| Contribution room recovery? | Yes (next Jan 1) | No | Only as repaid |
| Must hold before withdrawal? | No | 1+ year | 90 days minimum |
Tax benefit comparison
Scenario: $30,000 saved for a down payment, marginal tax rate 30%.
| Vehicle | Tax saved on contribution | Tax on withdrawal | Net tax benefit | Repayment? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFSA | $0 | $0 | $0 | No |
| FHSA | $9,000 | $0 | $9,000 | No |
| RRSP HBP | $9,000 | $0 upfront, but $600/year × 15 years if you miss repayments | $9,000 (if fully repaid) / $0 (if not repaid) | Yes — $2,000/year for 15 years |
The FHSA clearly wins for first-time buyers: same tax benefit as the RRSP with no repayment requirement.
Dollar comparison: which approach nets more?
Scenario: First-time buyer saving $8,000/year for 5 years at 5% return, 30% marginal tax rate.
| Strategy | Contributions (5 yr) | Tax refunds reinvested | Growth | Total available |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFSA only | $40,000 | $0 | $4,400 | $44,400 |
| FHSA only | $40,000 | $12,000 (invested in TFSA) | $5,700 (FHSA) + $1,300 (TFSA) | $59,000 |
| FHSA + RRSP HBP | $40,000 FHSA + $10,000 RRSP | $15,000 (invested in TFSA) | $5,700 + $500 + $1,600 | $72,800 |
| All three combined | $40,000 FHSA + $10,000 RRSP + $10,000 TFSA | $15,000 | $5,700 + $500 + $2,200 | $73,400 |
Stacking all three vehicles produces the most purchasing power, but the FHSA does the heaviest lifting because of the deduction + no repayment combination.
When to use your TFSA for a down payment
Best use cases
| Situation | Why TFSA works well |
|---|---|
| Not a first-time buyer | Only option with no first-time buyer restriction |
| Need to buy quickly | No holding period requirement (unlike FHSA’s 1-year minimum) |
| FHSA and HBP already maxed | TFSA provides additional down payment funds |
| Low income / low tax rate | RRSP deduction is less valuable; TFSA is equally effective |
| Want maximum flexibility | TFSA has no conditions, no repayment, no restrictions |
| Closing costs and reserves | Use TFSA for non-down-payment costs (FHSA and HBP must be used for the home itself) |
When to prioritize other accounts
| Situation | Better option |
|---|---|
| First-time buyer, have 1+ year | FHSA — deductible contributions + no repayment |
| High income ($80,000+), first-time buyer | RRSP HBP — large tax refund to reinvest |
| Already have large RRSP balance | RRSP HBP — deploy existing funds |
Optimized withdrawal strategy for maximum funding
First-time buyer buying in 2027 (starts saving in 2026)
| Year | FHSA | RRSP | TFSA | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $8,000 | $0 | $7,000 (add to existing balance) | Open FHSA, start contributions |
| 2027 | $8,000 | $0 | — | Continue FHSA contributions |
| 2027 (buying) | Withdraw ~$17,000 (FHSA) | Withdraw $0–$60,000 (HBP) | Withdraw as needed | Closing |
Repeat buyer (upgrading)
| Source | Available | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| TFSA | Your full balance | No restrictions — most flexible |
| Equity from current home sale | Net proceeds after costs | Primary source for most upgraders |
| RRSP HBP | Not available (not first-time buyer) | Unless you haven’t owned for 4+ years |
| FHSA | Not available (not first-time buyer) | — |
For repeat buyers, the TFSA is often the only registered account option for supplementing their down payment beyond sale proceeds.
Common mistakes to avoid
| Mistake | Consequence | How to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Re-contributing in the same year | 1%/month over-contribution penalty | Wait until January 1 of the following year |
| Not planning for closing costs | Short on funds at closing | Save 1.5–4% of purchase price separately |
| Selling investments at a loss before withdrawal | Lock in losses unnecessarily | Shift to cash/HISA 6–12 months ahead |
| Using TFSA instead of FHSA for first home | Missing $12,000+ in tax savings (on $40,000) | Open FHSA as soon as possible if you’re a first-time buyer |
| Withdrawing more than needed | Less in your TFSA for long-term growth | Calculate your exact needs (down payment + closing + reserves) |