First Home Savings Account: the most powerful tax-free homebuying tool in Canada
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) launched in 2023 and quickly became the most valuable financial tool for Canadian first-time homebuyers. It combines the best features of an RRSP (tax-deductible contributions) with the best features of a TFSA (tax-free withdrawals) — but exclusively for buying your first home. If you haven't opened one yet, you're leaving money on the table.
| Feature | FHSA | TFSA (for comparison) | RRSP (for comparison) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual contribution limit | $8,000 | $7,000 (2026) | 18% of prior income |
| Lifetime limit | $40,000 | No lifetime limit | No lifetime limit |
| Contributions tax-deductible? | Yes | No | Yes |
| Withdrawals tax-free? | Yes (qualifying) | Yes | No — taxable income |
| Eligible age | 18–71 | 18+ | 18–71 |
| Who qualifies | First-time buyers only | All Canadians | All Canadians |
Each year you hold an open FHSA, you accumulate $8,000 of new contribution room. You can carry forward one year of unused room. This means if you open an FHSA and contribute nothing in Year 1, you can contribute $16,000 in Year 2 ($8,000 current + $8,000 carried forward). You cannot carry forward more than one year, so there's no benefit to waiting more than one year to use your room.
To withdraw from your FHSA tax-free, you must meet all of the following:
For maximum purchasing power, combine your FHSA with the Home Buyers' Plan (HBP), which allows first-time buyers to withdraw up to $60,000 from their RRSP for a qualifying home purchase:
The FHSA is superior to the HBP because FHSA withdrawals don't require repayment. Prioritize maxing your FHSA before using the HBP.
If you're buying in 1–3 years, keep your FHSA in safer investments (GICs, high-interest savings). If you're 5+ years from buying, consider equity ETFs (XEQT, VEQT) — the longer horizon allows recovery from market downturns. Your FHSA can hold the same investments as a TFSA or RRSP: stocks, bonds, ETFs, GICs, mutual funds.
GICs (currently 4–5% for 1–3 year terms) or a high-interest savings product. Capital preservation is paramount when you need the money soon. A market correction the year before you buy could significantly reduce your down payment.
A diversified equity ETF like XEQT (iShares Core Equity ETF Portfolio) — 100% global equities, 0.20% MER, instant diversification across 9,000+ stocks. At 6–7% expected long-term return, $40,000 contributed over 5 years grows to approximately $55,000–$60,000.
If you don't use your FHSA for a home purchase, you have two options:
Either way, the FHSA is worth opening. In the worst case (you never buy a home), you get a free RRSP contribution room boost.
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