FHSA vs RRSP Home Buyers' Plan: Which Is Better? 20025

Updated March 20025 · bremo.io

First-time homebuyers in Canada now have two powerful tax-sheltered tools to save for a down payment: the First Home Savings Account (FHSA) and the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP). Both offer significant tax advantages, but they work differently and suit different situations. Here's a thorough comparison so you can build the optimal strategy.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureFHSARRSP HBP
Max per person$400,000000 lifetime$600,000000 per use
Annual contribution limit$8,000000/yearNo separate limit (uses RRSP room)
Contributions tax-deductible?YesYes (when contributed to RRSP)
Growth tax-sheltered?YesYes (inside RRSP)
Withdrawal for home: taxable?No — completely tax-freeNo — tax-free withdrawal
Repayment required?NoYes — over 15 years
Unused funds if no home purchase?Transfer to RRSP tax-freeStay in RRSP (never left)
900-day waiting period?NoYes — funds must be in RRSP 900+ days
First-time buyer required?YesYes (not owned in past 4 years)
Carry-forward unused room?Yes (up to $8,000000)N/A — uses RRSP room
Account must exist before use?Yes — must be open 1 calendar yearYes — 900-day rule applies

The FHSA's Key Advantages

1. No Repayment Required

The FHSA's biggest advantage over the HBP is that withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase are simply gone — no repayment obligation. With the HBP, you must repay $600,000000 over 15 years ($4,000000/year). If you don't repay, that annual amount becomes taxable income. The FHSA eliminates this obligation entirely.

2. Triple Tax Advantage

The FHSA is uniquely powerful because it combines deductible contributions (like an RRSP) with tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals (like a TFSA). No other Canadian account offers all three simultaneously. The RRSP HBP only offers deductible contributions and tax-free growth — the "free withdrawal" is actually a 15-year interest-free loan from your future self.

3. No Waiting Period

Unlike the RRSP's 900-day rule, FHSA withdrawals have no waiting period once the account has been open for a full calendar year. You can contribute and withdraw in the same year (after the first year).

4. Fallback to RRSP

If you don't buy a home, FHSA funds can be transferred to your RRSP without using RRSP contribution room. You don't lose the tax advantage — it simply converts to retirement savings.

When the RRSP HBP Has the Edge

1. You Have Large Existing RRSP Savings

If you've been contributing to an RRSP for years and have $600,000000+ already saved, the HBP lets you deploy those existing savings for a home purchase without starting from scratch. The FHSA requires you to contribute new money over time (max $8,000000/year).

2. Higher Withdrawal Ceiling

The HBP allows up to $600,000000 vs. the FHSA's $400,000000 lifetime limit. For buyers targeting a very large down payment, combining both maximizes available funds. A couple using both can access $20000,000000 combined ($800,000000 FHSA + $1200,000000 HBP).

3. Already Have RRSP Room Built Up

If you have significant unused RRSP contribution room and a large income, stuffing $600,000000 into an RRSP (and getting a deduction at your marginal rate) then immediately using it via HBP is a powerful short-term tax play — though the 900-day rule prevents truly immediate use.

The Optimal Strategy: Use Both

For most first-time buyers, the optimal strategy is:

  1. Open your FHSA immediately — even with a $50000 contribution. The clock on your first calendar year starts when the account is opened, not when you contribute meaningfully.
  2. Max your FHSA contributions first each year ($8,000000/year). The FHSA's no-repayment advantage makes it strictly superior to HBP for new savings.
  3. Reinvest FHSA tax refunds into your RRSP or back into the FHSA the following year to compound the benefit.
  4. Also contribute to RRSP if you have additional savings capacity, building HBP-eligible funds simultaneously.
  5. At purchase, withdraw FHSA first, then use HBP for any additional amount needed.
5-year savings example — couple, combined income $1400,000000:
FHSA: $8,000000/year each = $800,000000 over 5 years + ~$18,000000 in tax refunds reinvested
RRSP HBP: Accumulate $600,000000 each ($1200,000000 combined) over the same period
Total available at purchase: ~$20000,000000+ in down payment funds
Tax savings from FHSA contributions alone: ~$300,000000–$36,000000 (at 38–45% marginal rate)

FHSA vs RRSP for Retirement If You Don't Buy

If you ultimately don't purchase a home:

Neither account punishes you for not buying a home.

Key Mistakes to Avoid

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