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Is an FHSA Worth Opening in Canada? (First Home Savings Account)

Updated

What Makes the FHSA Uniquely Powerful

The FHSA launched in April 2023 and is one of the most tax-efficient accounts ever introduced in Canada. It combines features from both the RRSP and TFSA:

Feature RRSP TFSA FHSA
Contributions tax-deductible Yes No Yes
Growth tax-free No (tax-deferred) Yes Yes
Qualifying withdrawals tax-free No Yes Yes (for home purchase)
Annual room 18% of income $7,000 (2025) $8,000
Lifetime limit 18% × all earned income Cumulative since 18 $40,000
Counts against RRSP room N/A No No

The FHSA is the only account in Canadian tax law where contributions are deductible AND withdrawals (for qualifying purposes) are completely tax-free. This is superior to both the RRSP (taxable withdrawals) and TFSA (no deduction).

Is $40,000 Enough to Matter?

Yes — substantially.

Scenario Without FHSA With FHSA (max $40,000)
Tax saved on contributions (40% marginal rate) $0 $16,000
Tax-free growth over 5 years at 6%/yr N/A ~$13,000 in additional growth
Tax-free withdrawal N/A Entire balance
Total advantage vs. non-registered account ~$29,000+

Even at a 30% marginal rate, the tax savings on $40,000 of contributions alone is $12,000. The FHSA is effectively a $12,000–$16,000 government subsidy toward your down payment.

The “I Might Not Buy” Case for Opening an FHSA

Many Canadians hesitate to open an FHSA if they are not certain about buying. This hesitation is unfounded for most people:

What happens if you never buy a home:

  1. At any point you can transfer the full FHSA balance to your RRSP or RRIF
  2. The transfer does not use your RRSP contribution room — it is a clean rollover
  3. You already received the deduction when you contributed
  4. You still defer tax on the full transferred amount inside your RRSP

Net result: The FHSA function identically to an RRSP contribution — with the bonus that it doesn’t reduce RRSP room for those who want to maximize both.

The only downside of opening an FHSA and not buying a home: no tax-free qualifying withdrawal. Everything else is identical to an RRSP contribution.

When the FHSA Is Worth It: Almost Always

Profile Is FHSA worth opening?
Definite home buyer within 15 years Absolutely — maximize immediately, triple tax advantage
Might buy, not sure Yes — worst case it becomes free RRSP room
Self-employed with variable income Yes — deduction can be claimed in any future year
Maxed out RRSP and TFSA Yes — $8,000 more annual room, deductible
No income this year (student, parental leave) Yes — open now, claim deduction when income is higher
Planning to buy in 2–3 years Yes — even 2–3 years of contribution yields $16,000–$24,000 + returns

Optimizing the FHSA: Strategies

Strategy 1: Open immediately, contribute later

The 15-year clock starts when you open the account, not when you contribute money. Open an FHSA now even with $1 — this starts your 15-year window and preserves maximum flexibility.

Strategy 2: Carry forward room if income is low

Unused room (up to $8,000) carries forward one year. If you earn $40,000 this year, contribute later when income is higher. The deduction is worth more at a higher marginal rate.

Strategy 3: Combine FHSA + HBP

On purchase:

  • Withdraw up to $40,000 from FHSA — completely tax-free, no repayment required
  • Withdraw up to $35,000 from RRSP under Home Buyers Plan — repayment over 15 years
  • Total down payment assistance: $75,000 from tax-advantaged accounts

Strategy 4: Invest aggressively if time horizon allows

Tax-free qualifying withdrawals mean any growth inside the FHSA is never taxed. If you are 5+ years from buying, a diversified equity portfolio (e.g., XEQT, VEQT) maximizes the tax-free compounding benefit.

FHSA vs. RRSP Home Buyers Plan: Which Is Better?

Feature FHSA RRSP Home Buyers Plan
Amount available $40,000 lifetime $35,000 (2024+) per lifetime
Repayment required No Yes — 15 years
Tax on withdrawal None (qualifying) Deferred — repayments return room
Counts against RRSP room No Uses existing RRSP room
Can use both Yes — combine Yes — combine with FHSA

The FHSA is superior to the HBP for most buyers because there is no repayment obligation. The HBP is still useful because it adds $35,000 on top of the FHSA.

Who Should Wait or Pass

  • Already own a home: You are not eligible. The FHSA is only for first-time home buyers (did not own a qualifying home for 4 calendar years).
  • Over age 71: Cannot open an FHSA.
  • Non-resident of Canada: Not eligible.
  • Nominal situations: If you are 65+ and never intend to buy, the FHSA still converts to RRSP room — but at that age, RRSP conversion serves fewer years of deferral.
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