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The FHSA: Canada's Most Underused Account for First-Time Buyers

Personal Finance · February 18, 2026 · 5 min read
The FHSA: Canada's Most Underused Account for First-Time Buyers

The FHSA: Canada's Most Underused Account for First-Time Buyers

Introduced in 2023, the First Home Savings Account combines the best features of the RRSP and TFSA specifically for homebuyers — and most Canadians still haven't opened one. If you're a newcomer planning to buy a home in the next 5–15 years, this is the most important account you're not using yet.


What Makes the FHSA Exceptional

No other registered account in Canada offers this combination:

  • Contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP) — reducing your taxable income in the year you contribute
  • Withdrawals for a qualifying home are completely tax-free (like a TFSA) — no repayment required

Every other account forces you to choose one benefit. The FHSA gives you both.


The Numbers

FeatureDetails
Annual contribution limit$8,000
Lifetime contribution limit$40,000
Carry-forward roomUp to $8,000 of unused room carries to next year
Maximum carry-forward per year$8,000 (can't accumulate multiple missed years)
Account lifespan15 years from opening, or until age 71
Investment optionsETFs, stocks, mutual funds, GICs, cash

The carry-forward rule matters: If you contribute $4,000 in 2024, you carry forward $4,000 — making your 2025 limit $12,000. But if you contribute $0 in 2024, you can only add $8,000 of carry-forward in 2025 (not $16,000). Open the account immediately — even with $0 — to start the clock.


Who Qualifies

To open an FHSA, you must:

  1. Be a Canadian resident
  2. Be at least 18 years old
  3. Have a Social Insurance Number (SIN)
  4. Be a first-time homebuyer — defined as not having owned and lived in a qualifying home in the current year or any of the preceding four calendar years

Newcomer eligibility: Permanent residents and individuals on work permits who meet the above criteria can open an FHSA. You don't need to be a Canadian citizen.


How the Tax Deduction Works

When you contribute to an FHSA, you receive a tax deduction — meaning your taxable income is reduced by the amount you contributed.

Example:

  • Income: $85,000 (Ontario combined marginal rate ~33.89%)
  • FHSA contribution: $8,000
  • Tax refund: ~$2,711
  • After-tax cost of $8,000 contribution: ~$5,289

Then when you withdraw for your home purchase, you pay zero tax on the $8,000 + all growth. You've effectively received a government subsidy on your down payment.


Comparing FHSA to RRSP Home Buyers' Plan

Both accounts can be used for a first home purchase. They're not mutually exclusive — use both.

FeatureFHSARRSP (HBP)
Annual limit$8,000Contribute by room (18% of income)
Lifetime limit$40,000$60,000 withdrawal
Repayment required?NoYes — 15 years
Tax on withdrawalNoneNone (at withdrawal), but must repay
If not repaidAdded to income

Strategy: Max your FHSA first. Then use the Home Buyers' Plan as a secondary source. At closing, you can combine both — up to $40,000 from FHSA + up to $60,000 from RRSP HBP = potentially $100,000 tax-advantaged down payment contribution from registered accounts.


What Happens If You Don't Buy a Home?

If you never use the FHSA for a home purchase (or the 15-year window closes), you have two options:

  1. Transfer to your RRSP or RRIF — tax-free, no impact on RRSP contribution room. All growth and contributions land in your RRSP, where they'll be taxed on withdrawal (ideally in retirement at a lower rate).
  2. Withdraw as income — contributions and growth are added to your taxable income in that year, like an RRSP withdrawal.

Either way, you still benefited from years of tax deductions on contributions and tax-free compounding inside the account. The worst case — never buying a home — still leaves you ahead of not opening the account.


Where to Open an FHSA

Most major Canadian financial institutions now offer the FHSA:

  • Wealthsimple — easiest to open, supports ETF investing, no minimum deposit
  • Questrade — free ETF purchases, USD account support, good for self-directed investors
  • TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC — convenient, but push mutual funds; ask specifically for ETF access
  • National Bank — good rates, solid FHSA product

What to invest inside: XEQT or VEQT for a 10+ year horizon. XGRO or VGRO if you're buying in 5–8 years. As you get within 2–3 years of your target purchase date, shift to a capital-preservation option (GICs, bond ETFs).


The Clock Argument

The single most compelling reason to open an FHSA today — even if you have no money to put in it — is the carry-forward structure.

If you open in 2025 and contribute nothing, you carry forward $8,000 of room. In 2026, you can contribute up to $16,000 — getting two years of deductions in one shot.

If you wait until 2026 to even open the account, you permanently lose the 2025 carry-forward. You can't get those years back.

Open the FHSA today. Contribute whatever you can. Let the clock run.


Year-by-Year Scenario

Assume you open the FHSA in 2025 and contribute $8,000/year through 2029, then buy a home in 2030:

YearContributionCumulativeEst. value (6% growth)
2025$8,000$8,000$8,480
2026$8,000$16,000$17,469
2027$8,000$24,000$27,017
2028$8,000$32,000$37,178
2029$8,000$40,000$48,009

At withdrawal: $48,009 tax-free toward your home. Plus roughly $10,000–$13,000 in combined federal + provincial tax refunds over those 5 years. That's real money — and none of it requires buying any investment you wouldn't already be making.


Written by Raunaq Singh, Founder of Maple Syrup Money.

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