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RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA for Down Payments in Canada (2026 Complete Guide)

April 9, 2026 Mortgage Rules, new home owner

RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA for Down Payments in Canada (2026 Guide)

Written by Mark Herman, MBA – Mortgage Broker with 22 Years of Experience in First Time Buyers and Move Ups, and New Builds, in Calgary, Alberta & Victoria, BC.

If you’re buying a home in Canada, you have three powerful tools to build your down payment: RRSP (Home Buyers’ Plan), TFSA, and FHSA.

Used properly, these accounts can combine into $100,000+ per person tax-efficiently—but the rules, tax treatment, and transfer strategies are very different.

This guide breaks it down clearly—and shows how to stack them strategically.


Quick Comparison: RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA

Feature RRSP (HBP) TFSA FHSA
Tax deduction on contribution ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes
Tax-free withdrawal ⚠️ Yes (if repaid) ✅ Yes ✅ Yes (if buying home)
Repayment required ✅ Yes (15 years) ❌ No ❌ No
Max usable for down payment $60,000 per person No limit $40,000 lifetime
First-time buyer required ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes

RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP): Powerful—but Comes With Strings

How it works

The RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan allows you to withdraw up to:

$60,000 per person

  • Couples can access $120,000 combined

  • Withdrawals are not taxed upfront

  • BUT treated like a loan to yourself

Key rules

  • Must repay over 15 years

  • Payments start after a grace period (typically year 2–5 depending on timing)

  • Missed payments = taxable income

What the chart got right…

✔ Tax deductible going in
✔ Tax-deferred on withdrawal
✔ Contribution room is lost permanently

What it missed (important nuance)

  • It’s not truly tax-free—it’s a tax deferral

  • Repayment reduces your future investing capacity


TFSA: The Most Flexible (But No Tax Break Up Front)

How it works

  • Contributions are not tax deductible

  • Growth and withdrawals are completely tax-free

  • No restrictions on use (including down payment)

Key advantages

✔ Withdraw anytime, for any reason
✔ Contribution room comes back the next year
✔ No repayment required

Limits

  • Annual limit: ~$7,000 (2025)

  • Lifetime room accumulates

Best use case

Emergency fund + down payment flexibility
Bridge gaps between FHSA/RRSP strategies


FHSA: The Ultimate First-Time Buyer Account

This is the most powerful tool right now.

How it works

  • Contributions are tax deductible (like RRSP)

  • Withdrawals are tax-free (like TFSA)

Limits

  • $8,000/year

  • $40,000 lifetime

Key benefits

✔ No repayment required
✔ Tax deduction on contributions
✔ Tax-free withdrawal for home purchase

Your chart nailed it:

✔ “Best of both worlds” (RRSP + TFSA)


How These Accounts Work Together (The Real Strategy)

Here’s where things get interesting—and where most buyers miss opportunity.

The “Stacked Down Payment” Strategy

You can combine:

  • FHSA: $40,000 (tax-free, no repayment)

  • RRSP (HBP): $60,000 (must repay)

Total = $100,000 per person

Couples = $200,000+ potential down payment


Transferring Between Accounts (Critical Planning Tool)

1. RRSP ➜ FHSA (Allowed + Strategic)

  • You can transfer RRSP funds into FHSA

  • No immediate tax consequence

  • Does NOT restore RRSP room

Strategy:

  • Move RRSP funds → FHSA

  • Convert “repayable” money → non-repayable tax-free money


2. FHSA ➜ RRSP (If You Don’t Buy a Home)

  • Fully allowed, tax-deferred rollover

  • No impact on RRSP contribution room

Safety net: no downside to opening FHSA early


3. FHSA ➜ TFSA (Not Efficient)

  • Treated as:

    • Taxable withdrawal

    • New TFSA contribution

Avoid this move unless necessary


4. TFSA ➜ RRSP or FHSA

  • Allowed, but:

    • No tax advantage on transfer itself

    • Only useful if creating deduction room


Which Account Should You Use First? (Simple Priority Order)

1. FHSA (Always first)

  • Tax deduction + tax-free withdrawal

  • No repayment

2. RRSP (If income is high)

  • Use if:

    • You’re in a high tax bracket

    • You want refund to boost savings

3. TFSA

  • Use for:

    • Flexibility

    • Overflow savings

    • Short-term timelines


Example: Smart Calgary Buyer Strategy

Let’s say a buyer earns $110,000:

  1. Max FHSA → $8,000/year

  2. Contribute to RRSP → get ~$3,000 tax refund

  3. Put refund into TFSA

  4. Repeat annually

Result:

  • Tax refunds accelerate savings

  • FHSA builds tax-free down payment

  • RRSP adds leverage via HBP


Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Using RRSP before FHSA
❌ Not planning RRSP repayment impact
❌ Ignoring contribution room strategy
❌ Missing transfer opportunities


Bottom Line

  • FHSA = best account (no debate)

  • RRSP = powerful but comes with repayment

  • TFSA = flexibility tool

The real advantage comes from using all three together strategically


FAQ

How much can I take from my RRSP for a down payment?

Up to $60,000 per person under the Home Buyers’ Plan.

Can I use RRSP and FHSA together?

Yes—you can use both for the same home purchase.

Do I have to repay FHSA withdrawals?

No—FHSA withdrawals are tax-free and do not require repayment if used for a qualifying home.

What’s the best account for first-time buyers?

The FHSA, because it combines RRSP tax deductions with TFSA tax-free withdrawals.

Rental Property Mortgage Renewal Alberta: Insured vs Insurable Rates Explained

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Recent Blog Posts

  • RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA for Down Payments in Canada (2026 Complete Guide) April 9, 2026
  • Fixed vs Variable Mortgage Calgary 2026 | Should You Lock In Now? March 19, 2026
  • Mortgage Penalty Calculator Canada: How Fixed-Rate Penalties Are Calculated (2026 Guide) March 19, 2026

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