$60,000 limit, 15-year repayment, and how to stack HBP with FHSA for $100K+
Annual Required Repayment (1/15th):
The Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) is a federal program that allows first-time home buyers in Canada to withdraw up to $60,000 from their RRSP tax-free to purchase or build a qualifying home. The $60,000 limit per person was increased from $35,000 in Budget 2024 and applies to withdrawals made after April 16, 2024.
Couples where both partners qualify as first-time buyers can each withdraw up to $60,000 from their individual RRSPs, for a combined household total of $120,000. This is significant in major Canadian cities like Toronto and Vancouver where down payments routinely require $100,000+.
HBP withdrawals are not permanently tax-free — they must be repaid to your RRSP over 15 years. Repayment begins in the second calendar year after the year of withdrawal. The minimum annual repayment is 1/15th of the original HBP withdrawal amount.
| HBP Withdrawal | Annual Repayment (1/15th) | Total Over 15 Years |
|---|---|---|
| $20,000 | $1,333 | $20,000 |
| $35,000 | $2,333 | $35,000 |
| $50,000 | $3,333 | $50,000 |
| $60,000 | $4,000 | $60,000 |
| $120,000 (couple) | $4,000 each | $120,000 |
The 90-day rule catches many first-time buyers off guard. Any RRSP contribution made within 90 days of an HBP withdrawal cannot be claimed as an RRSP deduction. The funds can still be withdrawn under HBP, but there's no deduction benefit for those contributions. This means you need to plan RRSP contributions well before you know you'll be buying a home.
Ideal timeline: Contribute to your RRSP at least 90 days before you plan to withdraw. For a spring 2026 home purchase, contributions need to be in by late January 2026 at the latest.
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) launched in 2023 and is generally more advantageous than the HBP for most first-time buyers. Here's why:
| Feature | HBP (RRSP) | FHSA |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum Withdrawal | $60,000/person | $40,000/person |
| Repayment Required? | Yes — 15 years | No repayment ever |
| Tax Deduction on Contribution | Yes (RRSP deduction) | Yes (separate deduction) |
| Withdrawals Tax-Free? | No — tax-deferred only | Yes — completely tax-free |
| RRSP Room Used? | Yes (your own RRSP room) | No — FHSA has its own room |
| Can Stack Together? | Yes — combine with FHSA | Yes — combine with HBP |
Despite the FHSA being newer and simpler, the HBP still makes sense for:
You can repay more than the minimum 1/15th each year, which reduces your outstanding balance and future annual repayments. Early repayments also restore your RRSP's investment growth potential sooner. There's no prepayment penalty.
To make an HBP repayment, simply contribute to your RRSP and designate the contribution as an HBP repayment on Schedule 7 of your T1 tax return. If you contribute more than the required repayment, the excess can be claimed as a regular RRSP deduction.
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