FHSA: The Only Guide You Need

TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA: Quick Comparison Table
FeatureTFSARRSPFHSA
ContributionsAfter-TaxPre-Tax (tax-deductible)Pre-Tax (tax-deductible)
Withdrawals taxed?NoYesNo (if for home purchase)
Best forGeneral investing, flexibility Retirement savings, high earners First-time home buyers
Annual limit$7,000 (2025)18% of income ($32,490 max)$8,000
Lifetime limit $102,000 (as of 2025)None$40,000
Penalty for early withdrawal NoneYes (withholding + income tax)Yes (if not for home)
Age to open 18+No age minimum, but income required 18-71, must be a first-time buyer
How They Work TogetherHere’s the key: you don’t have to pick only ONE! Smart investors use all three strategically.Here is a possible strategyThe “Stacked” Strategy:
  1. Start with a TFSA Build an emergency fund or invest tax-free. It’s flexible and has zero penalties.
  2. Open an FHSA if buying a home in the next 10–15 years Max $8K/year gets you tax deductions and tax-free withdrawal for your down payment.
  3. Contribute to RRSP once your income climbs and tax savings become meaningful. Let the deduction work in your favour when you’re earning more
Example combo:You’re 27, earning $70K, planning to buy in 5 years.
  • $8K FHSA → tax deduction + future down payment
  • $5K TFSA → flexible savings/investments
  • RRSP? Not yet — income too low for major tax benefit (could be wasteful at this point in time)
Once you’re earning $100K+, start using RRSPs for tax deferral.Common Mistakes:
  • Using a TFSA like a chequing account. It’s meant for investing, not parking cash long-term
  • Thinking RRSP refunds are “free money.” You still pay tax later, use the refund to reinvest, not blow it
  • Ignoring the FHSA. It’s a government handout for home buyers and most Canadians still haven’t opened one
 The Bottom LineIf you only remember one thing from this article:The government gives you three legal cheat codes so use them all:
  • The TFSA is your tax-free growth engine
  • The RRSP is your tax-delaying retirement tool
  •  The FHSA is your golden ticket to your first home
Master these three and you’ll be ahead of 90% of Canadians financially.

This article was reviewed by a certified professional accountant(CPA) ‎

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