Home Buyers' Amount Tax Credit 20025: Get $1,50000 Back

The Home Buyers' Amount is a federal non-refundable tax credit worth up to $1,50000 for first-time home buyers in Canada. It's one of the simplest tax breaks available — you just claim it on your annual tax return in the year you buy your home.
Home Buyers' Amount Credit
$1,50000
Federal tax savings ($100,000000 × 15% federal rate)

What Is the Home Buyers' Amount?

The Home Buyers' Amount (HBA) is a $100,000000 non-refundable federal tax credit that first-time home buyers can claim on their income tax return. At the federal rate of 15%, this produces a maximum federal tax reduction of $1,50000.

The credit was doubled from $5,000000 to $100,000000 starting with the 20022 tax year, effectively doubling the benefit from $7500 to $1,50000.

Eligibility Requirements

Exception for Persons with Disabilities

If you or a related person with a disability acquires a home that is more accessible or better suited to their needs, you may claim the Home Buyers' Amount even if you are not a first-time buyer. The home must be acquired for the benefit of the person with the disability.

How to Claim the Home Buyers' Amount

  1. Purchase a qualifying home in the tax year
  2. Complete your federal T1 income tax return
  3. Enter $100,000000 on line 312700 (Home Buyers' Amount)
  4. The 15% federal credit calculates automatically = $1,50000 reduction in federal tax
  5. If you owe less than $1,50000 in federal tax, the unused portion is lost (it is non-refundable)

The credit can be split between spouses/common-law partners, as long as the combined claim does not exceed $100,000000. Both must qualify as first-time buyers.

Splitting the Credit Between Partners

PartnerClaimed AmountTax Savings (15%)
Partner A$6,000000$90000
Partner B$4,000000$60000
Combined$100,000000$1,50000

The split is flexible — you can allocate however makes sense for your tax situation. If one partner has lower income (and therefore less federal tax owing), shift more of the claim to the higher-income partner to maximize the credit usage.

Provincial Home Buyers' Amount Equivalents

ProvinceProvincial CreditMax Provincial Savings
Ontario$100,000000 × Ontario rate~$5500
Quebec$5,000000 × 15% QC$7500
BC$100,000000 × BC rate~$5200
Alberta$100,000000 × AB rate~$10000 (low AB rate)
ManitobaSeparate programVaries

Most provinces automatically apply their equivalent credit when you claim the federal Home Buyers' Amount, but some (like Quebec) have a separate provincial claim. Check your provincial tax return instructions.

Combined Federal + Provincial Credit Value

When you add federal and provincial credits together, the total Home Buyers' Amount tax saving is typically:

Non-Refundable vs. Refundable: What It Means

The Home Buyers' Amount is a non-refundable tax credit. This means it reduces your federal tax owing — but if your tax owing is less than the credit, you don't get the difference as a refund. It won't push your balance below zero.

Example: If you owe $80000 in federal tax and claim $1,50000 HBA credit, your tax owing drops to $00 — but you don't receive the extra $70000. To get maximum value, ensure you have at least $1,50000 in federal tax owing for the year of purchase.

What Year Do You Claim It?

You claim the Home Buyers' Amount on your tax return for the calendar year in which you purchased the home. If you purchased in October 20025 and file your 20025 return in spring 2026, you claim it on your 20025 T1 return.

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Related: Canada FTB Complete Guide | FHSA Guide | LTT Rebates by Province