The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is the most generous savings vehicle the Canadian government has ever offered first-time home buyers — combining the tax deduction of an RRSP, the tax-free growth and withdrawal of a TFSA, and a clean $40,000 lifetime room that exists on top of every other savings account you already have. Launched April 1, 2023, the FHSA can save the average GTA first-time buyer $10,000–$18,000 in tax on the way to their down payment. This guide explains exactly how it works in 2026, who qualifies, the contribution rules people misunderstand, and how to stack it with the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan to pull up to $100,000 tax-efficiently toward your first home.
What is the First Home Savings Account (FHSA)?
The FHSA is a registered savings account introduced by the federal government in 2023 to help Canadians save for their first home. It combines the two best tax features in Canadian personal finance:
- Contributions are tax-deductible — like an RRSP. Every dollar you put in reduces your taxable income for the year.
- Investment growth is tax-free — like a TFSA. No tax on interest, dividends, or capital gains while inside the FHSA.
- Withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase are tax-free — like neither RRSP nor TFSA on its own. The down payment funds come out completely untaxed.
The lifetime contribution limit is $40,000, with an annual cap of $8,000. The account has a maximum lifespan of 15 years from the date you open it (or until December 31 of the year you turn 71, whichever comes first).
How does the FHSA work in 2026?
The mechanics are simple in concept and a bit tricky in the details:
- Open an FHSA at any major Canadian bank, credit union, or self-directed brokerage (Questrade, Wealthsimple, TD Direct, etc.). Contribution room starts the year you open the account — not the year you became eligible. This is the #1 misunderstood rule.
- Contribute up to $8,000/year. Your unused room carries forward by $8,000 max per year (not the full lifetime amount).
- Claim the deduction on your tax return for the year you contributed. You can also carry the deduction forward to a later, higher-income year if it makes sense.
- Invest the money inside the FHSA — high-interest savings, GICs, ETFs, stocks, mutual funds. Like a TFSA or RRSP, you choose the investments.
- Withdraw tax-free for a qualifying home purchase — no repayment required (unlike the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan), and the contribution room is gone permanently.
FHSA contribution limits and rules (2026)
| Rule | 2026 limit / detail |
|---|---|
| Annual contribution limit | $8,000 |
| Lifetime contribution limit | $40,000 |
| Maximum carry-forward per year | $8,000 (so $16,000 max in any single year) |
| Account lifespan | 15 years from opening (or age 71) |
| Tax-free withdrawal limit | No cap — withdraw entire balance for first home |
| Over-contribution penalty | 1% per month on excess (same as TFSA) |
| Spousal contributions allowed? | No — each spouse needs their own FHSA |
| Multiple FHSAs allowed? | Yes, but combined limits still apply |
The carry-forward catch: unlike the TFSA, FHSA contribution room only carries forward $8,000 per year. If you open an account in 2026 and contribute nothing, in 2027 you have $16,000 of room (not $40,000). If you contribute nothing through 2030, you still have only $40,000 total — and you’ve burned 5 years of compounding.
The smart move: open the FHSA as soon as you turn 18 (or 19 in some provinces) and become eligible, even if you contribute $0 the first year. This starts your contribution room clock and your 15-year window. You don’t have to fund it immediately.
The 3-way tax advantage — real numbers
The FHSA is unique because all three tax benefits apply in sequence. Here’s the math on a maxed-out account for an Ontario buyer in the $80,000–$100,000 income range (~33% marginal tax rate):
| Stage | Action | Tax saved |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Contribute $8,000/year × 5 years = $40,000 total | ~$13,200 tax refund over 5 years (33% × $40,000) |
| 2 | Investment growth inside FHSA (5 years @ 7% avg) | ~$10,000 growth, all tax-free vs ~$3,300 saved vs taxable account |
| 3 | Withdraw entire ~$50,000 balance for first home | Tax-free (vs ~$15,000 tax if withdrawn from a regular RRSP outside HBP) |
| Total tax advantage | ~$16,000–$18,000 over 5 years |
If both spouses contribute, the household tax savings on first-home savings exceed $30,000 over 5 years — money that simply did not exist in any prior Canadian first-home savings program.
FHSA vs TFSA vs RRSP — which should you use?
| FHSA | TFSA | RRSP | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual limit (2026) | $8,000 | $7,000 | 18% of prior-year income, max $32,490 |
| Lifetime limit | $40,000 | No lifetime cap (cumulative since 2009) | Based on income (uncapped) |
| Contributions tax-deductible? | Yes | No | Yes |
| Growth tax-free? | Yes | Yes | Tax-deferred (taxed on withdrawal) |
| Withdrawal tax-free for first home? | Yes | Yes (always tax-free) | Only if using Home Buyers’ Plan (with repayment) |
| Repayment required after first home withdrawal? | No | No | Yes — 15 years for HBP |
| Contribution room recovered after withdrawal? | No | Yes (in following year) | Yes (RRSP room not lost) |
| Carry-forward limit | $8,000/year max | Unlimited | Unlimited |
The verdict for first-time buyers:
- If you’re saving for a first home and have any earned income → FHSA is the best vehicle. The triple tax advantage is unmatched.
- If you’ve maxed your $40,000 FHSA → next, contribute to your RRSP for the deduction, then plan to withdraw via the Home Buyers’ Plan.
- The TFSA is a flexible fallback — no income requirement to contribute, no penalty for withdrawal, no first-home restriction.
- Most first-time GTA buyers should use FHSA + RRSP HBP together — combined withdrawal capacity is now $100,000 per buyer (see next section).
FHSA + RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan — can you use both?
Yes — and this is the most powerful first-home savings strategy in Canada. As of April 16, 2024, the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan limit increased to $60,000 per person (up from $35,000). When combined with the FHSA’s $40,000 lifetime room, a single first-time buyer can now withdraw:
- $40,000 from FHSA — tax-free, no repayment
- $60,000 from RRSP via HBP — tax-free withdrawal, repaid over 15 years
- = $100,000 toward a first home per buyer
- = $200,000 for a couple who both maxed both accounts
Plus the actual investment growth inside both accounts — the real spendable total can easily exceed $250,000 for a well-planned couple over 5 years.
The RRSP HBP requires you to repay the withdrawal over 15 years (starting the second year after withdrawal), with each year’s repayment being either added back to your RRSP or counted as taxable income. The FHSA has no such repayment requirement — once you withdraw for a qualifying home, the funds and their growth are truly yours.
Who is eligible for the FHSA?
To open an FHSA in Canada, you must meet all three criteria:
- Be a Canadian resident for tax purposes
- Be at least 18 years old (19 in BC, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland & Labrador, Yukon, NWT, Nunavut — the provinces where the age of majority is 19)
- Be a first-time home buyer, meaning you haven’t lived in a qualifying home as your principal residence in the current calendar year or the previous four calendar years
The “first-time” rule is more generous than people expect. You qualify even if you:
- Owned a home more than 5 calendar years ago
- Are buying a home with a partner who currently owns a home
- Have used the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan in a previous transaction (as long as you’ve cleared the 4-year + current-year reset window)
A “qualifying home” includes any housing unit located in Canada — detached, semi-detached, condo, townhouse, mobile home, or a share in a co-op that gives you the right to occupy a housing unit.
How to open an FHSA in Canada
Opening an FHSA takes about 15 minutes online. You’ll need a Social Insurance Number, government ID, and proof of Canadian residency.
Best places to open an FHSA in 2026:
- Wealthsimple FHSA — no fees, easy to use, supports ETFs and stocks; great for hands-off investors
- Questrade FHSA — self-directed, low commissions on ETFs, full control
- EQ Bank FHSA — high-interest savings (currently around 3.0%+); good for short-term savers
- Big 5 banks (TD, RBC, BMO, Scotia, CIBC) — convenient if you bank there; investment options may have higher fees
- Credit unions — often competitive rates and personalized service
If you’re buying within 1–3 years, lean toward high-interest savings or short-term GICs. If your home purchase is 4–5+ years out, broader ETF investing inside the FHSA captures more growth tax-free.
What happens if you don’t buy a home?
If you don’t use the FHSA for a qualifying home purchase within 15 years (or by age 71), you have two options:
- Transfer the funds to your RRSP or RRIF — tax-free, with no impact on your RRSP contribution room. The deduction you already claimed stays valid, and the funds grow tax-deferred in the RRSP from there.
- Withdraw the funds directly — entire balance becomes taxable income at your marginal rate that year. This effectively reverses the tax benefit, so it’s almost always the wrong choice.
The transfer-to-RRSP option means the FHSA is virtually risk-free even if you don’t buy a home. Worst case: you’ve front-loaded your RRSP with bonus contribution room.
FHSA mistakes to avoid
- Waiting to open the account. Contribution room starts the year you open the FHSA — not when you become eligible. Open it as soon as you turn 18/19, even with $0 in it.
- Assuming TFSA-style unlimited carry-forward. FHSA carries forward only $8,000/year. Sit on the sidelines too long and you permanently lose room.
- Over-contributing. Same 1% per month penalty as TFSA. Track your contributions across all FHSAs if you have multiple.
- Withdrawing for non-home expenses. Triggers full taxation. If you really need the money for something else, transfer to RRSP instead — same outcome with no tax hit.
- Holding only cash inside the FHSA. 4+ year holding periods deserve ETF or equity exposure to compound tax-free. Cash savings rates rarely beat inflation.
- Missing the deduction year strategy. You can carry the deduction forward — contribute in a low-income year and claim the deduction in a higher-income year for a bigger refund.
The bottom line
The FHSA is the most generous savings tool the Canadian government has ever offered first-time home buyers, and it stacks with the expanded RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan to give a single buyer access to $100,000 of tax-efficient first-home capital — $200,000 for a couple. Open the account immediately when eligible, contribute consistently, invest the funds based on your timeline, and combine with the RRSP HBP when it’s time to buy. The result: a larger down payment, a smaller mortgage, and tens of thousands less in lifetime interest costs.
Buying your first home in the Greater Toronto Area? I can walk you through your full down payment strategy — FHSA, RRSP HBP, land transfer tax rebates, the right pre-approval, and what’s actually affordable on your income. Schedule a free 15-minute call: Contact Tej Thakor, or text +1 (647) 684-1731 on WhatsApp.
Related reading: What Is a Good Credit Score in Canada? · Ontario Mortgage Calculator (Payment, Affordability, LTT, CMHC) · Title Search in Ontario · Top 10 Real Estate Mistakes Buyers + Sellers Make
This article is for general information only and does not constitute personalized financial or tax advice. For advice on your specific situation, consult a licensed financial planner or CPA. Refer to the Canada Revenue Agency FHSA page for current official rules.
