FHSA Guide 2026 (First Home Savings Account Explained)
By Wealthvieu · Updated
The FHSA (First Home Savings Account) offers the best of both RRSP and TFSA: tax deductions on contributions and tax-free withdrawals for your first home.
FHSA Quick Facts
Feature
Details
Annual limit
$8,000
Lifetime limit
$40,000
Carryforward
Up to $8,000 unused room
Tax deduction
Yes (like RRSP)
Tax on withdrawal
No (like TFSA)
Eligibility
First-time home buyer, Canadian resident, 18+
FHSA vs RRSP vs TFSA
Feature
FHSA
RRSP
TFSA
Tax deduction
✅
✅
❌
Tax-free growth
✅
✅
✅
Tax-free withdrawal
✅ (for home)
❌
✅
Room restored on withdrawal
❌
❌
✅
Can combine for home
✅
✅ (HBP)
✅
FHSA is the clear winner for first-time home buyers.
Contribution Room
Year
Annual Limit
Carryforward
Total Possible
Year 1
$8,000
$0
$8,000
Year 2
$8,000
+$8,000
$16,000
Year 3
$8,000
+$8,000
$16,000
Year 4
$8,000
+$8,000
$16,000
Year 5
$8,000
+$8,000
$16,000
Maximum carryforward is $8,000. If you skip a year entirely, you can contribute $16,000 the next year.
Tax Savings Example
Income
FHSA Contribution
Tax Refund (Est.)
$50,000
$8,000
$2,400
$70,000
$8,000
$2,800
$100,000
$8,000
$3,200
$150,000
$8,000
$3,600
Over 5 years at $8,000/year, that’s $12,000-$18,000 in tax refunds.
Combine FHSA + RRSP HBP
Source
Tax-Free Withdrawal
FHSA
$40,000
RRSP (HBP)
$60,000
Total
$100,000
This gives you up to $100,000 in tax-advantaged down payment funds.
Withdrawal Rules
Requirement
Details
Purpose
Buy qualifying home
Timeline
Written agreement within 30 days
Occupancy
Must intend to live in home within 1 year
Repayment
Not required (unlike HBP)
Non-qualifying withdrawal
Taxed as income
Eligibility Requirements
Requirement
Details
Age
18+ (19+ in some provinces)
Residency
Canadian resident
First-time buyer
Not owned home in current year or previous 4 calendar years
Spouse status
Your spouse also cannot have owned a home you lived in
Investment Options
Investment
Available?
Savings account
✅
GICs
✅
ETFs
✅
Stocks
✅
Mutual funds
✅
Bonds
✅
Invest like you would in RRSP or TFSA. Consider timeline — if buying soon, keep it safe.
FHSA Timeline Strategy
Years to Purchase
Investment Strategy
1-2 years
High-interest savings, GICs
3-5 years
60/40 stocks/bonds, balanced ETF
5+ years
Growth-focused (80%+ stocks)
What If You Don’t Buy a Home?
Scenario
Option
Transfer to RRSP
Tax-free, doesn’t use RRSP room
Withdraw as cash
Taxed as income
Account expiry
15 years after opening, or age 71
You don’t lose the money — RRSP transfer is the backup plan.
Opening an FHSA
Available at most Canadian financial institutions: