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RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA: Which Account Should Newcomers Use First?

Personal Finance · February 18, 2026 · 4 min read
RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA: Which Account Should Newcomers Use First?

RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA: Which Account Should You Open First?

Canada gives newcomers three powerful registered accounts — and most people open the wrong one first. Here's a clear priority framework based on your income and goals.


What Each Account Actually Does

TFSA — Tax-Free Savings Account

  • Every dollar you earn inside a TFSA grows completely tax-free, forever
  • Withdrawals are never taxed and can be re-contributed the following year
  • You accumulate contribution room from the year you turn 18 and become a Canadian resident
  • 2024 annual limit: $7,000 (cumulative room if you've been a resident since 2009: $95,000)
  • No income requirements — works at any income level

RRSP — Registered Retirement Savings Plan

  • Contributions reduce your taxable income in the year you contribute
  • Growth is tax-deferred — you pay tax when you withdraw (ideally in retirement, at a lower rate)
  • Contribution room = 18% of your previous year's earned income, up to $31,560 (2024 limit)
  • Withdrawals are added to your income — timing matters
  • Newcomers do not accumulate RRSP room before becoming Canadian residents

FHSA — First Home Savings Account

  • Brand new as of 2023 — designed specifically to help Canadians buy their first home
  • Combines the best of both: contributions are tax-deductible (like RRSP) and withdrawals are tax-free (like TFSA) when used to buy a qualifying home
  • Annual limit: $8,000, lifetime limit: $40,000
  • Must be a first-time homebuyer (cannot have owned a home you lived in within the past 4 years)
  • Unused annual room carries forward by $8,000 (maximum)

The Priority Framework

If You're Earning Under ~$55,000/year → Start with TFSA

At lower incomes, your marginal tax rate is modest. RRSP deductions aren't as valuable — a $5,000 RRSP contribution only saves you ~$750 in taxes at a 15% marginal rate. Your TFSA grows tax-free and gives you flexible access to cash without triggering income.

Open a TFSA first. Fill it with low-cost index funds (VEQT or XEQT) or a high-interest savings account if you'll need the money soon.

If You're Planning to Buy a Home Within 5 Years → Open the FHSA Immediately

The FHSA is time-sensitive. The sooner you open it, the more room you accumulate. If you open it today and buy a home in 3 years, you could have deposited up to $32,000 (4 years × $8,000) and claimed every dollar as a tax deduction — while your withdrawals are completely tax-free.

Open the FHSA the moment you arrive in Canada if homeownership is even a 5-year possibility. You don't have to contribute the full $8,000 right away — just open it to start the clock.

If You're Earning Over ~$90,000/year → Prioritize RRSP

At higher income brackets (Ontario's combined marginal rate hits 43.41% at $100,000), an RRSP deduction is worth serious money. Every $1,000 contributed saves you $434 in taxes. Invest that refund back into the RRSP and you're compounding a significant tax advantage.

Contribute to RRSP, reinvest the refund, and let time do the work.


The Newcomer Wrinkle: Contribution Room

You accumulate TFSA room from the day you become a Canadian resident. RRSP room is based on your previous year's Canadian earned income — so your first year in Canada, you likely have little to no RRSP room.

Most newcomers should open a TFSA and FHSA in Year 1, then layer in RRSP contributions as their income grows.


The Three-Account Stack (The Ideal Setup)

AccountPriorityWhy
FHSAOpen immediatelyTax deduction + tax-free growth, clock starts now
TFSAFill nextTax-free growth, flexible withdrawals
RRSPAdd once income > $55KPowerful at higher marginal rates

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Over-contributing to RRSP at low income: You're trading a small deduction now for taxable withdrawals later
  • Not opening FHSA early enough: You can't backfill missed years (only 1 year carries forward)
  • Keeping cash in a chequing account instead of a TFSA: Even a high-interest savings account inside a TFSA beats a regular account
  • Withdrawing TFSA and not tracking re-contribution room: You get the room back January 1 of the following year — not immediately

Quick Action Plan

  1. Day 1: Open a TFSA and FHSA at your bank or Wealthsimple
  2. Contribute $500–$1,000 to each to get started (even small amounts start the compounding clock)
  3. File your taxes — you'll need a Notice of Assessment to confirm RRSP room
  4. Revisit your strategy each January when new contribution room opens

Three accounts, one priority order, and years of tax-free compounding ahead of you.


Written by Raunaq Singh, Founder of Maple Syrup Money.

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