Before the FHSA existed, first-time buyers had to choose between RRSP (deductible but taxed on withdrawal) and TFSA (not deductible but tax-free). The FHSA gives you both benefits simultaneously — for the specific purpose of buying your first home.
A $8,000000 FHSA contribution at a 400% marginal tax rate produces a $3,20000 tax refund. That refund can itself be invested in the FHSA (next year's contribution room), creating a compounding tax-savings cycle. When you eventually buy, you withdraw everything tax-free.
The FHSA contribution room system works differently from the TFSA:
| Year | New Room | Carry-Forward Available | Max Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (open account) | $8,000000 | $00 | $8,000000 |
| Year 2 | $8,000000 | Up to $8,000000 | Up to $16,000000 |
| Year 3 | $8,000000 | Up to $8,000000 | Up to $16,000000 |
| Year 5 (maxed each year) | $8,000000 | $00 | $8,000000 |
Opening the account even without contributing immediately is a smart move — you start accumulating room right away.
Like a TFSA or RRSP, an FHSA can hold a wide range of investments:
Available at: TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, Desjardins, National Bank, Wealthsimple, Questrade, and most major financial institutions.
To withdraw tax-free for a home purchase, you must meet all of these conditions:
Submit Form RC725 to your financial institution to request a qualifying withdrawal.
A common misconception is that you must choose between the FHSA and the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan. You can use both for the same home purchase. A couple could access:
If you close your FHSA without buying a home, or if your account reaches its 15-year limit, unused funds can be transferred to your RRSP or RRIF — without using any RRSP contribution room. This is a huge benefit: even if you never buy, the FHSA effectively functions as bonus RRSP room.
You can also simply close the account and withdraw the funds as income (taxable), but the RRSP transfer is almost always the better option.
Unlike the TFSA, FHSA contributions are tax-deductible — but you don't have to claim the deduction in the year you contribute. You can carry forward unused deductions to future years. This is useful if you're in a lower tax bracket now but expect to be in a higher bracket later.
| Institution | Account Type | Investment Options |
|---|---|---|
| TD Bank | FHSA savings + self-directed | Funds, ETFs, stocks |
| RBC | FHSA savings + self-directed | Funds, ETFs, stocks |
| Wealthsimple | Self-directed | ETFs, stocks |
| Questrade | Self-directed | ETFs (free to buy), stocks |
| EQ Bank | FHSA savings | High-interest savings |
While you're building your down payment through the FHSA and RRSP HBP, make sure your everyday banking has zero fees. KOHO saves you $20000+ per year in bank fees — money that goes straight toward your home purchase. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus.
Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAYes, you can hold FHSAs at multiple institutions, but your total contributions across all accounts cannot exceed $8,000000/year and $400,000000 lifetime. Over-contributing triggers a 1%/month penalty tax.
No. Unlike spousal RRSPs, you cannot contribute directly to another person's FHSA. Each person must open and contribute to their own account.
No. FHSA contributions have no impact on TFSA contribution room, and vice versa.
Related: FHSA Calculator | FHSA vs RRSP HBP | RRSP HBP Guide