$8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime — carry forward 1 year, first year opened matters
Your Available 2026 FHSA Contribution Room:
| Feature | Amount / Rule |
|---|---|
| Annual contribution limit | $8,000 |
| Lifetime contribution limit | $40,000 |
| Carryforward room | Up to $8,000 from prior year only |
| Maximum annual contribution with carryforward | $16,000 (if prior year room unused) |
| Tax deduction? | Yes — deductible like RRSP contributions |
| Qualifying withdrawals taxable? | No — completely tax-free |
| Repayment required? | No — unlike RRSP HBP |
| RRSP room used? | No — FHSA has its own room |
| Account must be closed by | December 31 of the year 15 years after opening, or age 71, whichever is earlier |
The FHSA carryforward rule allows you to carry forward unused annual room — but only from the immediately preceding year, and only if you had an open FHSA in that prior year. This is critical: you cannot retroactively accumulate room from years before you opened an account.
Example: If you opened your FHSA in 2026 and contributed nothing in 2026, you can carry forward $8,000 of unused 2026 room to 2027. In 2027 you could contribute up to $16,000 ($8,000 for 2027 + $8,000 carried forward from 2026).
Compare to someone who opens their FHSA in 2028: they start fresh with just $8,000 of room, plus up to $8,000 carryforward from 2027 — total $16,000. They cannot access the 2023–2026 room they missed by not opening early.
| Year Opened | Room Available in 2026 | Maximum If Fully Contributed |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $8,000 (plus carryforward from 2025) | $8,000 (after contributing $32,000 in 2023–2025) |
| 2024 | $8,000 (plus carryforward from 2025) | $8,000 (after contributing $24,000 in 2024–2025) |
| 2025 | $16,000 (current + carryforward from 2025) | $16,000 (if nothing contributed in 2025) |
| 2026 | $8,000 (current year only) | $8,000 |
The FHSA deduction is completely separate from your RRSP deduction. Contributing $8,000 to your FHSA reduces your taxable income by $8,000 — in addition to any RRSP contribution you make. For a taxpayer in the 43.7% combined bracket (Ontario, $100K income), an $8,000 FHSA contribution generates a refund of approximately $3,500.
Unlike RRSP contributions, FHSA contributions do not have a 60-day grace period. All FHSA contributions must be made within the calendar year (January 1 – December 31). There is no first-60-days rule like the RRSP.
In 2026, a first-time buyer can use both the FHSA and the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan simultaneously for the same home purchase:
This is the most powerful down payment accumulation strategy available to Canadian first-time home buyers in 2026. See our FHSA vs HBP comparison for detailed scenarios.
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