FHSA 2026 Guide

FHSA: First Home Savings Account Canada

The FHSA is the most powerful savings tool ever created for Canadian first-time homebuyers — combining RRSP-style tax deductions with TFSA-style tax-free withdrawals. Here's everything you need to know.

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FHSA at a Glance: Annual contribution limit $8,000 · Lifetime limit $40,000 · Contributions are tax-deductible · Qualifying withdrawals are tax-free · Unused room carries forward (max $16,000/year) · Account can be held for up to 15 years or until age 71

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What Is the First Home Savings Account (FHSA)?

The FHSA is a registered account introduced by the federal government in April 2023 specifically to help Canadians save for their first home. It blends the best features of two existing accounts:

This combination is uniquely powerful. No other registered account in Canada allows you to both deduct contributions and withdraw proceeds tax-free for the same purpose.

FHSA Eligibility Rules

To open and contribute to an FHSA, you must:

Contribution Rules and Limits

RuleAmount / Detail
Annual contribution limit$8,000 per year
Lifetime contribution limit$40,000 per person
Carry-forward roomUp to $8,000 of unused room can carry forward (max $16,000/year)
Contribution deadlineDecember 31 each year (unlike RRSP which has a March 1 deadline)
Over-contribution penalty1% per month on excess amounts
Account lifespan15 years from first opening, or end of year you turn 71
Strategy: Open your FHSA as soon as you're eligible — even if you can only contribute $1 — to start your 15-year clock and begin accumulating contribution room. You don't need to make the full $8,000 contribution immediately. Once opened, unused room from the current year carries forward to the next.

Tax Benefits: How the Deduction Works

Every dollar you contribute to your FHSA reduces your taxable income by one dollar in the year of contribution (or in a future year if you choose to carry the deduction forward — unlike RRSP contributions, there's no obligation to claim the deduction immediately).

At a 43.41% marginal tax rate (combined federal + Ontario), contributing $8,000 to your FHSA generates a $3,473 tax refund. Over five years of maximum contributions ($40,000 total), you'd receive approximately $17,364 in tax refunds — money you can reinvest, add to your TFSA, or put toward closing costs.

Qualifying Withdrawals: Buying Your Home Tax-Free

To make a qualifying (tax-free) withdrawal from your FHSA, you must:

  1. Be a first-time homebuyer at the time of withdrawal
  2. Have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home before October 1 of the following year
  3. Intend to occupy the home as your principal place of residence within one year of purchase/construction
  4. The home must be located in Canada

Qualifying withdrawals are not included in your income — you pay zero tax on the principal contributed AND the investment growth inside the account.

FHSA + RRSP Home Buyers' Plan: Stack Both Benefits

The FHSA and RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) can be used together for the same home purchase. This is a powerful combination:

What Happens if You Don't Buy a Home?

If you close your FHSA without making a qualifying home purchase, you have two options:

In either case, you don't lose the tax refunds you already received. The worst case is your FHSA becomes a bonus RRSP contribution — still a very good outcome.

Investment Options Inside an FHSA

FHSAs can hold the same investments as a TFSA or RRSP:

For a 3–5 year timeline (typical for saving toward a home), consider a balanced portfolio of GICs and broad-market ETFs. Equity-heavy portfolios carry short-term risk but historically outperform GICs over multi-year periods.

FHSA Strategy: Year-by-Year Optimization

  1. Year 1: Open FHSA immediately. Contribute any amount to start room accumulation. Invest in a high-interest savings ETF or GIC.
  2. Years 2–5: Max out $8,000/year (catch up to $16,000 in years you missed). Claim deductions in your highest-income years for maximum tax refund value.
  3. Year of purchase: Make qualifying FHSA withdrawal. Combine with RRSP HBP if applicable.

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