Skip to main content

Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) Canada: Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

The RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) lets you withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP tax-free to buy or build your first home. For a couple, that is $120,000 combined. This guide covers eligibility, withdrawal rules, repayment schedules, and how to use the HBP strategically — including combining it with the FHSA.

HBP at a glance — 2026 rules

Feature Details
Maximum withdrawal $60,000 per person ($120,000 per couple)
Tax on withdrawal None (if repaid on schedule)
Repayment period 15 years
Repayment start 2nd year after the year of withdrawal
Minimum annual repayment 1/15 of total withdrawal
90-day rule Funds must be in RRSP 90+ days before withdrawal
First-time buyer definition Have not owned a home in the past 4 years
Can be used with FHSA? Yes — combine for $100,000/person

Who qualifies for the HBP

To participate in the Home Buyers’ Plan, you must meet all of these requirements:

  1. Canadian resident — You must be a resident of Canada at the time of withdrawal and until the home is purchased
  2. First-time home buyer — Neither you nor your spouse/common-law partner owned and lived in a home as a principal residence in the current year or any of the 4 preceding calendar years
  3. Written agreement — You must have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home in Canada
  4. Intent to occupy — You must intend to occupy the home as your principal residence within one year of buying or building it
  5. 90-day deposit rule — The RRSP funds you withdraw must have been on deposit for at least 90 days
  6. Withdrawal timing — Withdrawal must be made no earlier than 30 days before closing and no later than 30 days after

The 4-year ownership reset

The “first-time buyer” definition is actually a 4-year look-back, not a lifetime restriction. If you owned a home previously but have not owned one (as a principal residence) in the last 4 calendar years, you qualify again. This means you can potentially use the HBP more than once.

Example: You sold your home in June 2021 and have been renting since. As of January 1, 2026, you have not owned a home for 4 full calendar years (2022, 2023, 2024, 2025). You qualify for the HBP again in 2026, provided your previous HBP balance is fully repaid.

How to withdraw from the HBP — step by step

Step 1: Ensure your RRSP is funded (90+ days before closing)

The 90-day rule is the most common stumbling block. If you plan to withdraw in June 2026, the contribution must have been made by March 2026 at the latest.

Closing Date Latest RRSP Contribution Date Eligible for Withdrawal
June 1, 2026 March 3, 2026 June 1, 2026
August 1, 2026 May 3, 2026 August 1, 2026
October 1, 2026 July 3, 2026 October 1, 2026

Step 2: Complete Form T1036

File CRA Form T1036 — Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) Request to Withdraw Funds from an RRSP with your RRSP issuer (your bank or investment provider). You can make multiple withdrawals from multiple RRSPs, but each requires a separate T1036 form.

Step 3: Receive your funds

Your RRSP issuer will release the funds without withholding tax (unlike regular RRSP withdrawals, which are subject to withholding). The funds are deposited to your bank account, typically within 5–10 business days.

Step 4: Buy your home

You must buy or build the qualifying home by October 1 of the year after withdrawal. If you withdraw in 2026, the home must be purchased by October 1, 2027.

Step 5: File your tax return

Report the HBP withdrawal on your tax return for the year of withdrawal. No tax is payable as long as you meet all conditions and begin repayments on schedule.

HBP repayment schedule

The repayment timeline is structured but has consequences for missed payments:

Year Event Repayment Due
Year of withdrawal (e.g., 2026) Withdraw from RRSP None
Year after withdrawal (2027) Grace period None
2nd year after withdrawal (2028) Repayments begin 1/15 of total
Years 3–15 (2029–2041) Annual repayments continue 1/15 of total
15th year after withdrawal (2041) Final repayment Remaining balance

Repayment amounts by withdrawal size

HBP Withdrawal Annual Repayment (1/15) Monthly Equivalent
$20,000 $1,333 $111
$35,000 $2,333 $194
$40,000 $2,667 $222
$50,000 $3,333 $278
$60,000 (max) $4,000 $333

What happens if you miss a repayment

If you do not contribute the minimum amount to your RRSP and designate it as an HBP repayment, the unpaid amount is added to your taxable income for the year:

Example: You withdrew $60,000. Your minimum annual repayment is $4,000. In 2028, you only repay $1,500.

  • Shortfall: $4,000 − $1,500 = $2,500
  • $2,500 is added to your 2028 taxable income
  • At a 30% marginal tax rate, this costs you $750 in tax

The consequence is not a penalty — it is that you lose the RRSP tax deferral on the unreturned portion. You essentially convert your RRSP withdrawal from tax-free (under HBP) to taxable (regular RRSP withdrawal).

HBP + FHSA: the ultimate combination

First-time buyers in 2026 can access up to $100,000 per person in tax-advantaged funds:

Program Max Withdrawal Tax-Deductible? Repayment Required?
FHSA $40,000 Yes No
HBP (RRSP) $60,000 Already deducted Yes (15 years)
Combined $100,000 Partial

Strategy: Use your FHSA first (no repayment), then the HBP for additional funds. For a couple:

Source Per Person Per Couple
FHSA $40,000 $80,000
HBP (RRSP) $60,000 $120,000
Total $100,000 $200,000

If a couple has saved $200,000 in tax-advantaged accounts, that is a 20% down payment on a $1,000,000 home — eliminating the need for CMHC mortgage insurance.

HBP vs FHSA: which should you prioritize?

Factor FHSA HBP (RRSP)
Max amount $40,000 $60,000
Tax deduction on contribution Yes Yes (regular RRSP)
Tax on withdrawal None None (if repaid)
Repayment required No Yes — 15 years
Time to fill 5 years minimum Depends on RRSP balance
Available to First-time buyers only First-time buyers (4-year reset)
Best for First $40K of savings Additional funds beyond FHSA

Priority: FHSA first, HBP second. Every dollar in the FHSA is permanently tax-free. Every dollar from the HBP must be repaid or taxed.

Common HBP strategies

Strategy 1: Maximize the FHSA, then HBP for the gap

  • Save $40,000 in FHSA over 5 years ($8,000/year)
  • Accumulate RRSP through employer matching and contributions
  • Withdraw from both: $40,000 (FHSA) + $60,000 (HBP) = $100,000 down payment

Strategy 2: Quick HBP boost

If you do not have 5 years to wait for FHSA:

  • Contribute to RRSP (get tax deduction)
  • Wait 90 days
  • Withdraw under HBP
  • Net effect: immediate tax deduction + tax-free home purchase funds (but must repay)

Strategy 3: Accelerated repayment

Repay the HBP faster than the 15-year minimum to restore your RRSP for retirement:

  • Minimum repayment on $60K: $4,000/year
  • Accelerated: $10,000/year = paid off in 6 years
  • Extra repayments above the minimum are counted against your required balance

Tax implications

Scenario Tax Effect
Contribute to RRSP Tax deduction in the year of contribution
Withdraw under HBP No tax (no withholding)
Repay on schedule No tax (restoring your RRSP)
Miss a repayment Shortfall added to taxable income
Repay more than minimum Excess reduces future required repayments

Important: HBP repayments are not tax-deductible. You already got the deduction when you originally contributed to your RRSP. The repayment simply restores the tax-sheltered status of those funds.