Skip to main content

FHSA Qualifying Home Purchase Rules Canada (2026)

Updated

To make a tax-free qualifying withdrawal from your First Home Savings Account (FHSA), the property you are buying must meet specific rules set by the CRA. Understanding what counts — and what does not — prevents a costly taxable withdrawal.

What is a qualifying home?

A qualifying home for FHSA purposes must be:

Requirement Details
Located in Canada The property must be in Canada. Foreign real estate does not qualify.
Intended as principal residence You must intend to occupy it as your principal place of residence within one year.
Have a written agreement You must have a written agreement to buy or build before making the withdrawal.

Types of property that qualify

Property Type Qualifies? Notes
Detached house ✅ Yes Most common qualifying purchase
Semi-detached / duplex ✅ Yes As long as one unit is your principal residence
Townhouse ✅ Yes Freehold or condo-style both qualify
Condominium unit ✅ Yes Including new construction pre-sale condos
Mobile or modular home ✅ Yes Must be on a permanent foundation
Co-operative housing share ✅ Yes If the share gives you the right to occupy as principal residence
Land + construction contract ✅ Yes Must have a written construction agreement
Cottage / vacation home ❌ No Not principal residence
Rental property ❌ No Not principal residence
Commercial property ❌ No Not residential
Foreign property ❌ No Must be in Canada

The first-time home buyer definition

To make a qualifying withdrawal, you must also be a first-time home buyer. This condition is separate from the property type condition.

Under FHSA rules, you are a first-time home buyer if you have not owned a qualifying home in Canada that you lived in as your principal place of residence:

  • At any time in the current calendar year before the FHSA was opened, and
  • At any time in the preceding four calendar years

This is often called the five-year look-back rule.

First-time buyer qualification examples

Scenario First-Time Buyer?
Never owned a home in Canada ✅ Yes
Owned a home in Canada but sold it 5+ years ago ✅ Yes
Owned investment property but never lived in it ✅ Yes
Moved to Canada but owned abroad (never owned in Canada) ✅ Yes
Spouse owned a home 6 years ago (both moved out) ✅ Yes
Owned a home in Canada 3 years ago ❌ No
Spouse currently owns a home in Canada ❌ No
Sold your home 2 years ago and rented since ❌ No

Key nuance: The look-back applies to homes in Canada only. If you owned property abroad but never owned a Canadian home (or not in the last five years), you typically qualify as a first-time buyer. This is significant for newcomers to Canada.

Must your spouse also qualify?

Yes. Both you and your spouse or common-law partner must individually meet the first-time buyer definition at the time of withdrawal. If your spouse owned a home in Canada within the past five years, neither of you can make a qualifying FHSA withdrawal for that purchase.

Your Status Spouse’s Status Can Both Use FHSA?
First-time buyer First-time buyer ✅ Yes
First-time buyer Owned home 3 years ago ❌ No
First-time buyer Owned investment property (never lived in) ✅ Yes
Owned home 2 years ago First-time buyer ❌ No

The written agreement requirement

You must have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home before you request an FHSA withdrawal. A verbal agreement or an accepted offer does not meet this requirement on its own — there must be a signed written contract.

Purchase Type What Counts as the Written Agreement
Resale home Signed Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS)
New construction / builder Signed purchase agreement with the builder
Custom build on owned land Signed construction contract with the builder
Pre-construction condo Signed pre-sale agreement

Timing: withdrawal relative to closing

Stage Can You Withdraw?
Before signing APS ❌ No
After signing APS, before closing ✅ Yes
Within 30 days after closing ✅ Yes
More than 30 days after closing ❌ No

You have a 30-day window after the closing date to make the withdrawal retroactively, but this is the outside limit.

Occupancy requirement: the one-year rule

After a qualifying withdrawal, you must:

  1. Complete the purchase of the qualifying home
  2. Occupy it as your principal place of residence by October 1 of the year following the withdrawal
Withdrawal Date Occupancy Deadline
January 2026 October 1, 2027
June 2026 October 1, 2027
December 2026 October 1, 2027
March 2027 October 1, 2028

Principal residence means the home you primarily live in. You do not need to own no other properties, but the qualifying home must be where you routinely reside.

Edge cases and common questions

Pre-construction condos

A pre-construction condominium purchase qualifies as long as you have a signed agreement with the developer and intend to occupy the unit as your principal residence within one year of the expected completion date. Delays in occupancy beyond the one-year window can jeopardize qualifying status — contact CRA if this happens.

Buying jointly with a non-qualifying partner

If you are buying with a spouse who does not meet the first-time buyer definition, neither of you can make a qualifying FHSA withdrawal for that purchase. However, if you are buying with a friend, sibling, or other person who is not your spouse, your qualifying status is assessed independently. You may be able to make a qualifying withdrawal even if your co-purchaser cannot.

Inheriting a home

If you inherit a home and live in it, you typically no longer qualify as a first-time buyer from that point forward (subject to the five-year look-back). An inherited home that you never live in does not generally disqualify you.

What if the deal falls through?

If a transaction collapses after a qualifying withdrawal has already been made, you should notify CRA. You may face a taxable situation depending on circumstances. In some cases, CRA allows re-contribution — keep all documentation from the failed transaction.

The qualifying withdrawal process (Form RC725)

Once you have confirmed eligibility, follow these steps:

Step Action
1 Confirm you meet the first-time buyer definition
2 Sign a written purchase or construction agreement
3 Complete Form RC725 — Request to Make a Qualifying Withdrawal from your FHSA
4 Submit Form RC725 to your FHSA issuer (financial institution)
5 Receive funds tax-free — no withholding applies to qualifying withdrawals
6 Close on the home and occupy as principal residence by the deadline

Qualifying vs non-qualifying withdrawal: the tax difference

The difference in tax treatment makes it critical to meet all qualifying conditions before withdrawing.

Withdrawal Type Tax Withheld at Source Reported on Tax Return Net Tax
Qualifying home purchase None Not included in income $0
Non-qualifying (eg. early access, wrong property) Yes (depends on amount) Included as taxable income Full marginal rate

Example: $40,000 non-qualifying withdrawal at a 40% combined marginal tax rate = $16,000 in tax owing.