FHSA Transfer to RRSP

The powerful fallback: transfer unused FHSA to RRSP without using RRSP contribution room

The most underrated feature of the FHSA: If you never buy a home, you can transfer your entire FHSA balance to your RRSP or RRIF — completely tax-deferred, and without using any of your RRSP contribution room. You got the deduction when you contributed. The growth was tax-free. And the transfer doesn't cost you future RRSP room. It is arguably risk-free from a tax perspective.

How the FHSA-to-RRSP Transfer Works

Section 146.6(8) of the Income Tax Act allows FHSA holders to make a "direct transfer" of FHSA funds to an RRSP or RRIF at any time before the FHSA account must be closed — without triggering income inclusion and without reducing the RRSP's regular contribution room.

This is different from withdrawing the FHSA and re-contributing to an RRSP — which would require sufficient RRSP contribution room. The FHSA direct transfer bypasses the RRSP room requirement entirely.

Why This Makes the FHSA a No-Risk Proposition

The FHSA-to-RRSP transfer mechanism eliminates the downside risk of opening an FHSA. Here is the comparison:

ScenarioOutcome for FHSA Holder
You buy a qualifying homeWithdraw up to $40,000 tax-free, no repayment
You do not buy a homeTransfer up to $40,000 to RRSP, no RRSP room used, deferred until retirement withdrawal
You die before using the FHSABalance transfers to surviving spouse's RRSP/RRIF tax-free (if designated), or included in terminal return

In all three scenarios, you benefited from: (1) the tax deduction when you contributed, and (2) tax-free growth inside the account. The FHSA is essentially a dual-purpose account — home savings account OR bonus RRSP room, depending on life circumstances.

FHSA Transfer vs. Regular RRSP Contribution

A regular RRSP contribution requires available contribution room (18% of prior year income, up to $32,490 in 2026). An FHSA-to-RRSP transfer has no such requirement. This is particularly valuable for:

Example: A teacher with a large DB pension may have virtually no RRSP room due to pension adjustments. Opening an FHSA and contributing $8,000/year gives them $40,000 of additional RRSP-equivalent room over 5 years — room they could never access through a regular RRSP contribution. At retirement, they transfer it to their RRIF tax-free. The tax savings on $40,000 at a 43% marginal rate = $17,200 in lifetime taxes saved.

When the FHSA Must Be Closed

The FHSA must be closed (and any remaining balance transferred, withdrawn, or converted) by December 31 of the earliest of:

If the balance is not transferred to an RRSP/RRIF or withdrawn as a qualifying or taxable withdrawal by this deadline, the remaining balance will be included in the holder's taxable income for that year.

Partial Transfers Are Allowed

You do not need to transfer the entire FHSA balance at once. You can make partial transfers to your RRSP at any time — for example, transferring $100 per year over several years. This flexibility allows you to manage RRSP room and timing strategically. Each partial transfer still does not consume RRSP contribution room.

Process: How to Make a FHSA-to-RRSP Transfer

  1. Contact your FHSA issuer and request a "direct transfer" to your RRSP or RRIF
  2. Complete the required transfer form (your institution will provide it)
  3. The transfer must go directly from FHSA to RRSP — you cannot receive the funds and deposit them yourself (that would be a taxable withdrawal)
  4. Your FHSA issuer will issue a T4FHSA slip and your RRSP issuer will issue contribution receipts — however, the transfer amount does not appear as an RRSP contribution deduction since no room is consumed

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