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FHSA for New Canadians and Newcomers (2026 Guide)

Updated

Canada’s First Home Savings Account offers a major opportunity for newcomers — and a detail that surprises many: owning a home abroad does not disqualify you. If you have never owned a principal residence in Canada (or not in the last five years), you likely qualify as a first-time buyer under FHSA rules even if you were a homeowner in your country of origin.

Basic FHSA eligibility for newcomers

Requirement Rule Notes for Newcomers
Age Must be 18 or older Same for all applicants
Canadian tax residency Must be a tax resident when opening and withdrawing Work permit holders qualify if filing Canadian taxes
First-time home buyer Cannot have owned + lived in a Canadian home in current year or past 4 years Foreign home ownership does not disqualify you
Citizenship or PR Not required Temporary residents (open work permit, study permit, etc.) may qualify

The first-time buyer rule: why foreign ownership does not disqualify you

This is the most important distinction for newcomers. The FHSA first-time buyer definition specifically refers to homes in Canada:

You qualify as a first-time home buyer if you have not owned a home in Canada that you used as your principal place of residence at any time in the current calendar year or in the preceding four calendar years.

Newcomer Scenario Qualifies as First-Time Buyer?
Owned a home in China, India, USA, UK, or elsewhere — never owned in Canada ✅ Yes
Owned a home abroad, renting in Canada since arrival ✅ Yes
Spouse owned a home abroad, neither ever owned in Canada ✅ Yes
Owned a Canadian home before emigrating, sold 6 years ago ✅ Yes
Owned a Canadian home before emigrating, sold 3 years ago ❌ No
Purchased a Canadian investment property (never lived in it) ✅ Yes
Spouse currently owns a home in Canada (and you both live in it) ❌ No

Practical example: A couple moves from India to Ontario in 2024. They owned a home in Mumbai and sold it before leaving. They have never owned a home in Canada. Both qualify as first-time buyers for FHSA purposes and can each open an FHSA immediately after establishing Canadian tax residency.

When you can open your FHSA

You can open an FHSA as soon as you become a Canadian tax resident and meet the age and first-time buyer requirements. There is no waiting period.

Timeline Action
Arrive in Canada / establish tax residency Begin as eligible Canadian tax resident
Same year (once 18+, first-time buyer) Open FHSA, start building contribution room
Any subsequent year Continue contributing, benefit from carry-forward
When ready to buy Make qualifying withdrawal, potentially combine with HBP

Open early: Even if you cannot contribute much in your first year, opening the account starts your carry-forward room clock. Room only accumulates from the year the account is open.

Residency status and FHSA: who qualifies

Immigration Status Can Open FHSA? Notes
Canadian citizen ✅ Yes No additional requirements
Permanent resident (PR) ✅ Yes No additional requirements
Open work permit holder ✅ Yes Must be a Canadian tax resident
Employer-specific work permit ✅ Yes Must be a Canadian tax resident
International student (study permit) ✅ Often If filing Canadian taxes and deemed resident — confirm with a tax professional
Visitor / tourist ❌ No Not a tax resident
Non-resident ❌ No Cannot open or contribute while non-resident

Tax residency vs immigration status: Canadian tax residency is determined by where you live and your residential ties to Canada — not solely by your immigration status. Most people on work or study permits who live in Canada are Canadian tax residents. If uncertain, confirm with CRA or a tax professional.

FHSA contribution strategy for newcomers

Year 1: lower income year

Many newcomers earn less in their first Canadian tax year. The FHSA deduction can be deferred — you contribute now but claim the deduction in a future year when your income (and tax bracket) is higher.

Strategy Benefit
Contribute in Year 1 (even $1,000) Opens account, starts carry-forward, investment grows tax-free
Defer deduction to Year 3 or 4 Claim deduction when in a higher tax bracket for larger refund
Invest in growth assets More time in account = more tax-free growth

Example: You arrive in Canada in 2026 and earn $40,000 in your first year. You contribute $4,000 to an FHSA but defer the deduction. By 2028 you earn $95,000. Claiming the $4,000 deduction at a 33% marginal rate saves approximately $1,320 in tax — versus claiming in 2026 at 20.05%, which would have saved only ~$800.

Carry-forward planning for newcomers

Year Scenario Room Available
2026 (arrival year, opens account) Contributes $2,000 $2,000 contributed; $6,000 carry-forward to 2027
2027 Room = $8,000 (new) + $6,000 (carry-forward) = $14,000 Can contribute up to $14,000
2028 If $6,000 unused in 2027, carry-forward = $6,000 → room = $14,000

Opening early creates the most room when you are ready to make a large purchase.

FHSA and the Home Buyers’ Plan for newcomers

Newcomers who also have RRSP savings (from Canadian employment) can use both the FHSA and the HBP for the same purchase.

Source Newcomer Notes
FHSA Available immediately from first year as tax resident
RRSP + HBP RRSP balance must be developed from Canadian employment income; 90-day seasoning rule applies

Tip: Newcomers often prioritize TFSA or RRSP in early years for flexibility or tax refunds. The FHSA is the strongest account specifically built for a first home purchase — but it requires planning time to build up contributions.

What happens if you become a non-resident

If you move out of Canada after opening an FHSA:

Scenario Tax Consequence
Become a non-resident, keep FHSA Cannot contribute further; 25% withholding on withdrawals (may be reduced by treaty)
Transfer FHSA to RRSP before departure Tax-free transfer; RRSP then subject to non-resident rules
Make qualifying withdrawal while still resident Tax-free, standard rules apply before departure

If you plan to eventually leave Canada, transfer your FHSA balance to an RRSP before becoming a non-resident to preserve the tax advantage.

Important rules specific to the FHSA (vs TFSA and RRSP)

Newcomers familiar with other registered accounts should note how FHSA differs:

Feature FHSA TFSA RRSP
Room accumulates before opening? ❌ No ✅ Yes (from age 18 / 2009) ✅ Yes (from employment)
Withdrawal tax-free unconditionally? Only for qualifying home ✅ Always ❌ Taxable as income
RRSP deduction-type benefit? ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes
Can foreign nationals open it? ✅ If tax resident ✅ If tax resident (18+) ✅ If tax resident