Why the FHSA Still Deserves Attention in 2026
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) has now been around long enough that most first-time buyers have heard of it. But in 2026, we’re still seeing the same mistake play out over and over again: people waiting to open an FHSA because they don’t feel “ready” to buy yet.
That hesitation is understandable. Toronto prices are high, timelines feel uncertain, and many renters assume they’ll deal with the FHSA later. The problem? Waiting doesn’t just delay your savings — it quietly limits how much tax-advantaged room you’ll ever have access to.
According to the Canada Revenue Agency, FHSA contribution room only begins once the account is opened — unused room doesn’t magically backfill for years you waited. The FHSA hasn’t changed in 2026. But misunderstanding how it works can still cost you tens of thousands in future buying power.
What Are the FHSA Contribution Limits in 2026?
The contribution rules for 2026 remain the same as prior years (unlike a TFSA), but they’re worth restating clearly.
You can contribute up to $8,000 per calendar year, with a lifetime maximum of $40,000 per person. Contributions are tax-deductible, similar to an RRSP, and qualifying withdrawals to buy a first home are completely tax-free, similar to a TFSA.
The CRA confirms these limits continue to apply in 2026, with no increase to annual or lifetime caps. That combination alone makes the FHSA one of the most powerful tools Ottawa has ever created for first-time buyers. But the real leverage comes from when you open it.
The Carryforward Rule Most Buyers Get Wrong
This is where things tend to go sideways. FHSA contribution room does not automatically accumulate just because the program exists. Your contribution room only begins once you actually open an FHSA.
How FHSA Carryforward Really Works
If you open an FHSA, any unused annual contribution room carries forward to future years. If you don’t open one, there is nothing to carry forward. That means you can’t retroactively claim FHSA room for years you waited on the sidelines.
Opening Early vs Waiting: A Simple Example
Consider two identical buyers. Buyer A opens an FHSA in 2024 but doesn’t contribute right away. Buyer B waits until 2026 because buying still feels far off.
By 2026:
- Buyer A has $24,000 of available contribution room
- Buyer B has just $8,000
Same income. Same savings habits. Very different outcomes — entirely because of timing. Opening the account early doesn’t force you to contribute immediately. It simply starts the clock.
Why Starting Early Matters (Even If Buying Feels Years Away)
We hear the same refrains all the time:
“Prices might come down.”
“We’ll save more once income increases.”
“We’re not buying for a while anyway.”
All reasonable thoughts. But the FHSA works best precisely because it allows you to plan ahead of certainty.
Starting early benefits renters who expect their incomes to rise, couples coordinating two separate buying timelines, and buyers who may not know yet whether their first purchase will be a condo, a townhouse, or something else entirely.
You’re not committing to a purchase date. You’re preserving future flexibility.

How the FHSA Fits Into a Real Toronto Buying Plan
In practice, most Toronto buyers don’t rely on a single tool. The FHSA can be used alongside the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan, allowing buyers to stack tax advantages in a meaningful way. Individually, that can translate into a significant down payment boost. For couples, the numbers become even more impactful when both partners plan early.
This is where we often see the difference between buyers who feel stretched and buyers who feel prepared — not because they timed the market perfectly, but because they structured their savings early.
What Happens If You Don’t End Up Buying?
Another common hesitation is the fear of locking money into something too specific. If you don’t end up buying a qualifying home, your FHSA can be rolled into your RRSP or RRIF without triggering tax consequences. There’s no penalty for changing plans, and no obligation to buy simply because you opened the account. That’s why, from a planning perspective, the downside risk of opening early is extremely limited.
The Bottom Line for First-Time Buyers
Opening an FHSA early doesn’t lock you into a decision. It simply gives you more options later — more contribution room, more tax efficiency, and more control over how and when you buy.
If you’re a renter thinking about buying in Toronto in the next few years, the smartest move often isn’t waiting for the perfect moment — it’s putting the right structure in place early.
Thinking about your first purchase or trying to map out a realistic buying timeline? We help Toronto buyers plan years ahead, not just shop when listings pop up. Start with a conversation and build the strategy before the pressure kicks in.




