The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) — Canada's Best First-Home Tool
The FHSA was introduced in April 2023 and is now the strongest standalone tool for Ottawa first-time buyers. Here's why:
- Tax-deductible contributions — like an RRSP, reduces your taxable income
- Tax-free withdrawals — like a TFSA, no tax when you withdraw for your first home
- No repayment required — unlike the RRSP HBP, you never have to pay it back
- $8,000/year contribution limit
- $40,000 lifetime maximum
- Unused room carries forward up to $8,000 per year
Open your FHSA today. Contribution room only starts after the account is opened. Even opening it with $1 now means you can contribute $16,000 by this time next year. Waiting a year costs you $8,000 in room permanently.
The RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) — Up to $60,000 Per Person
The HBP lets you withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP tax-free for your first home purchase. Key rules:
- Maximum withdrawal: $60,000 per person ($120,000 for a couple)
- Funds must have been in the RRSP for at least 90 days before withdrawal
- Must be repaid to your RRSP over 15 years (starting 2 years after withdrawal)
- If you miss a repayment, the missed amount is added to your taxable income that year
- You must be a first-time buyer (haven't owned a home in the past 4 calendar years)
The HBP is essentially an interest-free loan from your future retirement savings. It's powerful but comes with a repayment obligation the FHSA doesn't have.
The Right Order to Use These Programs
This is where most Ottawa first-time buyers get it wrong. The correct order:
- Open your FHSA first — start the contribution room clock immediately
- Max your FHSA every year — $8,000/year, up to $40,000 lifetime. No repayment required.
- Contribute to RRSP for HBP — once FHSA is maxed, build RRSP for HBP withdrawal
- Withdraw FHSA first at purchase — always exhaust tax-free no-repayment FHSA before touching HBP
- Use HBP to top up — use RRSP HBP for any additional down payment needed
Always use FHSA before HBP. The FHSA has no repayment requirement. Every dollar from the HBP must be paid back or it becomes taxable income. The FHSA is strictly better — exhaust it first.
The Couple Strategy — Up to $200,000 Tax-Advantaged
For a couple buying their first Ottawa home together, combining both programs creates a remarkable down payment opportunity:
- FHSA — Partner 1: $40,000 (tax-free, no repayment)
- FHSA — Partner 2: $40,000 (tax-free, no repayment)
- RRSP HBP — Partner 1: $60,000 (repay over 15 years)
- RRSP HBP — Partner 2: $60,000 (repay over 15 years)
- Combined: $200,000 in tax-advantaged down payment savings
On a $1,000,000 Ottawa home, this represents a 20% down payment — eliminating CMHC mortgage insurance entirely and saving tens of thousands in insurance premiums over the life of the mortgage.
Common Mistakes Ottawa First-Time Buyers Make
- Not opening the FHSA early enough. Every year you delay opening the account is $8,000 of contribution room permanently lost.
- Contributing to RRSP for HBP without the 90-day wait. Funds must sit in the RRSP for 90 days before HBP withdrawal or the deduction is disallowed.
- Using HBP before FHSA. Always maximize the no-repayment FHSA first.
- Forgetting about HBP repayments. Missing even one year's repayment adds that amount to your taxable income. Set up automatic RRSP contributions to handle repayments.
- Withdrawing from a locked-in RRSP. Group RRSPs and locked-in accounts cannot be used for HBP. Ensure your HBP funds are in a standard RRSP.
Not sure which programs apply to your situation? Book a free call and we'll walk through your specific numbers — no obligation.
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