FHSA Investment Strategies 2026

Timeline-based investing: GICs for 1-2 years, balanced ETFs for 3-5 years

The Key Principle: Match Investment Risk to Your Timeline

Unlike a TFSA or RRSP used for long-term retirement savings, the FHSA is a goal-based account with a defined end date — your home purchase. This means the investment strategy inside your FHSA should be directly tied to how many years you have before you plan to buy. The shorter your timeline, the more conservative your investments should be. You cannot afford a 30% stock market drawdown three months before your closing date.

FHSA Investment Strategy by Timeline

Timeline to PurchaseRecommended StrategyTarget ReturnRisk Level
Under 1 yearHISA or cashable GIC4–5%Very Low
1–2 yearsShort-term GIC (1-year non-redeemable) or HISA4.5–5.5%Low
2–3 yearsLaddered GICs or conservative bond ETF4–6%Low-Moderate
3–5 yearsBalanced ETF (e.g., XBAL, VBAL) 60/405–8%Moderate
5+ yearsGrowth ETF (e.g., XGRO, VGRO) 80/20 or equity ETF6–9%Moderate-High

Short Timeline (1–2 Years): GICs and HISAs

If you are planning to buy within the next 1–2 years, the primary risk is not earning too little — it is losing principal in a market downturn. GIC rates in Canada in 2026 remain attractive (roughly 4.0–5.0% for 1-year terms at most major banks and credit unions). A non-redeemable 1-year GIC held inside your FHSA will earn interest tax-free, just like any other FHSA investment.

High-interest savings accounts (HISAs) offered by online banks inside an FHSA offer full liquidity with rates typically in the 4.0–4.5% range. These are ideal if your closing date is uncertain.

GIC laddering strategy: If you are building up your FHSA over 2 years before purchasing, consider staggered maturities. Invest each annual $8,000 contribution in a 1-year non-redeemable GIC. When the first matures, you can either renew or withdraw for your purchase.

Medium Timeline (3–5 Years): Balanced ETFs

With a 3–5 year horizon, a balanced allocation (60% equities / 40% bonds) provides growth potential while managing downside risk. Two-thirds of market corrections recover within 2–3 years historically, making a balanced approach reasonable for this window.

Recommended FHSA balanced ETFs for Canadian investors in 2026:

Longer Timeline (5+ Years): Growth ETFs

If you are not planning to buy for 5+ years, a growth-oriented allocation (80% equity / 20% bonds) or even 100% equity is reasonable. The longer the timeline, the more time the portfolio has to recover from market volatility.

Important: As your target purchase date approaches (within 1–2 years), gradually shift from growth assets to GICs or HISAs. Do not leave 100% equity exposure in your FHSA when you are 12 months from a purchase. A market correction could delay your home purchase or force you to buy with a smaller down payment.

What NOT to Hold in Your FHSA

Avoid the same pitfalls as with TFSAs:

The Fallback Strategy: FHSA as Bonus RRSP Room

If you are investing in a growth-oriented FHSA and markets perform well, you may find your FHSA grows significantly. If you ultimately choose not to buy a home (or delay beyond the 15-year limit), the entire balance can be transferred to your RRSP without using RRSP contribution room. The FHSA effectively became a turbo-charged RRSP with an extra deduction. See our FHSA-to-RRSP transfer guide.

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