The First Home Savings Account is the most powerful savings tool available to Canadian first-time buyers. It combines the best features of an RRSP and a TFSA — and the single most important thing to understand about it is this: the contribution room starts accumulating the day you open the account, not the day you contribute.
What is the FHSA?
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is a registered savings account introduced by the Government of Canada in April 2023. It is specifically designed to help first-time buyers accumulate a down payment using tax-advantaged savings. Unlike most government programs for first-time buyers, the FHSA requires no application and no approval — you simply open one at your bank.
The core mechanics are straightforward:
- Contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP) — they reduce your taxable income for the year
- Growth inside the account is tax-free (like a TFSA)
- Withdrawals for a qualifying first home purchase are completely tax-free
No other savings vehicle in Canada offers all three of these benefits simultaneously for the same purpose.
Contribution limits and carry-forward rule
The annual contribution limit is $8,000 per year, with a $40,000 lifetime maximum. If you do not use your full $8,000 contribution room in a given year, up to $8,000 of unused room carries forward to the following year — giving you a maximum of $16,000 to contribute in one year if you missed the previous year entirely.
Couples buying together can each have their own FHSA — combined, that's up to $80,000 in tax-advantaged savings before the first contribution is even made, if both accounts were opened in the same year.
FHSA vs. RRSP Home Buyers' Plan
Many first-time buyers are familiar with the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP), which allows you to withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP tax-free for a first home purchase — but requires repayment over 15 years. The FHSA is different: FHSA withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase never need to be repaid.
The two programs can be combined. A couple who each have maxed their FHSA ($40,000 each) and use the HBP ($60,000 each) could access up to $200,000 in tax-advantaged capital for their down payment. In practice, most first-time buyers will not reach these maximums, but the structure gives significant flexibility.
What counts as a qualifying home purchase?
To make a qualifying FHSA withdrawal, you must:
- Be a first-time home buyer — defined as not having owned a qualifying home that you lived in during the current year or the preceding four calendar years
- Have a written agreement to buy or build a qualifying home in Canada before October 1 of the year following the withdrawal
- Intend to occupy the home as your principal residence within one year of purchase
The definition of "first-time buyer" for FHSA purposes is the same used for the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan — meaning if you owned a home more than five years ago but have been renting since, you may qualify.
What investments can you hold inside an FHSA?
An FHSA can hold the same types of investments as an RRSP — savings deposits, GICs, mutual funds, ETFs, and individual stocks, depending on the institution. If your home purchase is 3–5+ years away, investing in a diversified portfolio inside your FHSA can generate significant tax-free growth on top of your contributions. If you're purchasing within 1–2 years, a high-interest savings deposit or short-term GIC provides predictable returns with no market risk.
The full FHSA module is inside the free program
Module 4 of the Turning Keys program covers the FHSA in detail — including the carry-forward rule, how to combine it with the RRSP HBP, what to hold inside the account, and when to start withdrawing. Free, no payment required.
Open the Free Program →Frequently asked questions
Disclaimer: This article is educational content only — not financial, mortgage, legal, or real estate advice. Rules and figures are current as of 2024–25 and may change. Always consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your situation. Turning Keys is operated by Wise Victoria Mortgages (BCFSA Lic. #MB600614) and Nick Wise Personal Real Estate Corporation.