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Using Your TFSA for a First Home Purchase Canada 2025

Your TFSA is one of the best tools for saving a down payment tax-free. Here is how it compares to the FHSA and RRSP Home Buyers' Plan, and the best strategy for first-time buyers.

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The Three Accounts for First-Time Home Buyers

AccountAnnual LimitLifetime LimitTax Deduction on ContributionTax-Free Withdrawal for HomeRepayment Required
TFSA$7,000$95,000 (cumulative room)NoYes — any withdrawal is tax-freeNo
FHSA$8,000$40,000YesYes — for qualifying first homeNo
RRSP (HBP)$32,490 (2025)$35,000 (HBP max)YesYes — for first home via HBPYes — over 15 years

Why the TFSA Is Excellent for a Home Down Payment

The TFSA's biggest advantage for home savings is complete flexibility. Unlike the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP), there is no repayment obligation when you withdraw TFSA funds for a home purchase. Unlike the FHSA, there are no restrictions on how many times you've owned a home or what you must do with the money. You withdraw whatever you need, whenever you need it, completely tax-free and with no strings attached.

Your withdrawn TFSA room also comes back on January 1 of the following year — so after you buy your home, you can rebuild your TFSA over time.

The Optimal First-Home Savings Stack (2025)

For most first-time buyers, the best approach is to use all three accounts in this order of priority:

Example: A couple saving for a first home can combine: $40,000 FHSA each ($80,000 combined) + TFSA savings of $50,000+ each = well over $170,000 in tax-advantaged down payment capacity between them.

What to Hold in Your TFSA While Saving for a Home

The right investment depends on your timeline:

TFSA Withdrawal for a Home: No Rules, No Forms

Unlike the RRSP HBP (which requires Form T1036 and the property must be owner-occupied), withdrawing TFSA funds for a home purchase requires nothing from the CRA. You simply withdraw the money and use it. There is no application, no qualifying conditions, no repayment schedule. This simplicity makes the TFSA the most practical and flexible home savings vehicle available to Canadians.

After You Buy: Rebuilding Your TFSA

Once you've bought your home, your withdrawn TFSA room comes back on January 1 of the following year. Start re-contributing as soon as your budget allows. Your TFSA is now your primary retirement savings and general wealth-building vehicle. Continue maxing it annually to build long-term tax-free wealth alongside your home equity.

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