TFSA | RRSP | FHSA

TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA: Which Account Should Canadians Use First?

Last updated April 29, 202611 min read
By Gourav KumarReviewed against current Canadian source materialLast verified for 2026Fact-checked against official Canadian sourcesEditorial standardsReport an issue
GK

Gourav Kumar, Founder of Easy Finance Tools

Independent Canadian finance tools creator. Educational content only; not a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional.

About the authorLast reviewed: Last updated April 29, 2026
Updated for 2026 Canadian rules
Quick AnswerWhich registered account should Canadians use first?

If you are an eligible first-time home buyer with a realistic home timeline, the FHSA often deserves first consideration. If not, the TFSA often comes first for flexibility and lower income, while the RRSP becomes stronger when your current tax rate is meaningfully higher than your expected retirement tax rate.

  • FHSA can be powerful for eligible first-home buyers because it combines a deduction with a qualifying tax-free withdrawal.
  • TFSA is often strongest for flexibility, tax-free withdrawals, and lower-to-moderate income years.
  • RRSP is often strongest when the current deduction is valuable and retirement is the main goal.
  • Many Canadians eventually use all three accounts, but the first dollar should match the goal.

How to use this guide

Read for the decision, then verify the rule

What changes the answer?

Look for the income, timeline, account-room, province, tax, or risk assumption that would make the conclusion weaker.

What source applies?

Use the official links below for rules, limits, tax treatment, benefit dates, or mortgage guidance before acting.

What is not covered?

Personal tax history, contribution-room records, employer plans, debt terms, and household constraints may change the practical decision.

Founder review

Written and maintained by Easy Finance Tools

This page is written and maintained by Easy Finance Tools, checked against official Canadian sources where applicable, and not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor unless a reviewer is explicitly named.

Source verification

Checked against official Canadian sources where applicable

Last updated: April 29, 2026

Last verified for 2026: official rule pages and source links checked where they apply.

What was checked

  • - Primary source links where applicable
  • - Educational disclaimer and decision caveats
  • - Related calculator and guide links
  • - No professional review claim unless explicitly provided

Known limitations

  • - This guide cannot see personal account room, tax filing history, employment benefits, debts, or household constraints.
  • - Official rules and eligibility should be verified before acting.
This page is for education and planning support only. It is not financial, tax, legal, mortgage, or investment advice. Report an error or outdated source.

Video support

Watch the account-priority explanation on YouTube

A future video can walk through the same TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA decision framework without replacing the written source-linked guide.

TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA: which account gets the next dollar?

Planned video support: first-home eligibility, income tax tradeoffs, flexibility, and examples.

TFSA vs RRSP used to be the main Canadian account decision. The FHSA changed that for first-time home buyers. Now the better question is not simply which account is best, but which account should get the next dollar based on the job of the money.

This guide compares TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA priorities using plain-language rules, Canadian examples, and practical mistakes to avoid. It does not tell you what to buy or promise that one account is always best.

The simple priority framework

Start with the goal. If the goal is a first home and you are eligible, the FHSA usually moves to the top of the list because contributions can be deductible and qualifying withdrawals can be tax-free. That combination is rare.

If a first home is not realistic or you are not eligible, compare TFSA and RRSP. TFSA usually wins when flexibility matters or when your current tax rate is not high. RRSP usually becomes stronger when the deduction is meaningful and the money is for retirement.

AccountBest first useMain tradeoff
FHSAEligible first-time home buyer with a real purchase goalOnly fits if rules and home timeline work
TFSAFlexibility, lower income, tax-free accessNo deduction when contributing
RRSPHigher current tax rate and retirement savingWithdrawals are generally taxable

When FHSA should come first

The FHSA often deserves first consideration when you are eligible and buying a first home is a serious possibility. It can provide an RRSP-like deduction on the way in and a TFSA-like qualifying withdrawal on the way out. That does not mean everyone should rush to open one, but it does mean the FHSA should not be ignored if the home goal is real.

The FHSA is weaker when home buying is unlikely, eligibility is uncertain, or cash flow is so tight that a simpler emergency fund matters more. It also has rules around opening, participation room, qualifying withdrawals, and closure that require more attention than a basic savings account.

When TFSA should come first

The TFSA often comes first when flexibility is valuable. Withdrawals are generally tax-free, and withdrawn amounts are normally added back as room the following year. That makes the TFSA useful for medium-term goals, uncertain plans, and long-term investing where tax-free access matters.

The TFSA is also attractive at lower incomes because the RRSP deduction may be less valuable. If your tax rate is modest today and could be higher later, preserving RRSP room while using TFSA room can be a reasonable planning choice.

When RRSP should come first

The RRSP becomes stronger when the deduction does real work. If you are in a higher tax bracket now and expect lower taxable income in retirement, the RRSP can help shift taxable income from a higher-rate year to a lower-rate year. That is the core RRSP tradeoff.

The RRSP is less flexible than a TFSA because withdrawals are generally taxable and room is not restored after normal withdrawals. That makes it better suited to retirement saving than to uncertain short-term goals.

A practical order for the next dollar

A clean order is: build a basic emergency buffer, capture any employer match if available, check FHSA eligibility if a first home is realistic, then compare TFSA and RRSP using income and flexibility. This avoids choosing an account in isolation.

If you are still unsure, split the contribution between accounts rather than waiting forever. A partial FHSA plus TFSA strategy can make sense for uncertain home buyers, while a partial RRSP plus TFSA strategy can make sense for higher-income investors who still value flexibility.

What people misunderstand

What actually matters for Canadians

The account is a job description

TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA are not just containers with different limits. Each account should have a job: flexibility, retirement deduction, or first-home planning. The best account changes when the job changes.

A refund is not the same as being ahead

An RRSP refund can feel like a win immediately, but the long-term result depends on withdrawal tax later and whether the refund is reinvested or used intentionally.

FHSA eligibility can outrank a simple tax comparison

For an eligible first-time buyer, the FHSA may deserve attention even when the TFSA feels simpler, because it can combine deduction value with a qualifying tax-free withdrawal.

Splitting contributions can be rational

When home timing, income, and flexibility are all uncertain, splitting across accounts can be more practical than waiting for a perfect answer.

Before you decide

When this strategy may not fit

  • -You have high-interest debt or no emergency buffer, making account optimization less urgent than cash-flow stability.
  • -You are not FHSA-eligible, in which case the decision usually returns to TFSA vs RRSP.
  • -Your expected retirement income is not meaningfully lower than current income, which can weaken the RRSP advantage.
  • -You need the money soon and would have to invest in risky assets to justify a registered-account choice.

Common edge cases

Where the simple answer can be wrong

A near-term home purchase changes everything

An FHSA can look strongest on tax treatment, but if the money is needed within months, investment risk and withdrawal paperwork may matter more than projected growth.

RRSP looks best only because the refund is spent

If the refund disappears into regular spending, the RRSP may not improve long-term wealth as much as the calculator output implies.

TFSA room is already full

A TFSA-first answer can be correct in theory but unavailable in practice. Actual room, not preference, controls the next contribution.

Province changes the tax spread

RRSP deduction value depends on combined federal and provincial marginal rates. A national example can be directionally useful but still wrong for a specific province.

Example scenario

Example: $10,000 to allocate across accounts

Assume Alex has $10,000 available, earns $85,000, rents in Canada, and may buy a first home in four years. If Alex is FHSA-eligible, contributing up to $8,000 to the FHSA may be a strong first step because it creates potential deduction value and can support a qualifying down payment later. The remaining $2,000 might go to a TFSA for flexibility.

If Alex were not buying a home, the decision changes. At $85,000 of income, Alex might compare RRSP deduction value with TFSA flexibility. If retirement is the priority and the deduction is meaningful, RRSP could get more of the contribution. If plans are uncertain, TFSA may be the cleaner first account.

Common mistakes

Mistakes to avoid

Ignoring FHSA when buying is realistic

Eligible first-time home buyers may miss a valuable account if they only compare TFSA and RRSP.

Using RRSP for short-term flexibility

Normal RRSP withdrawals are generally taxable and room is not restored like TFSA room.

Choosing based only on contribution limit

The largest limit is not automatically the best account. Goal, tax rate, and withdrawal rules matter more.

Opening accounts before understanding room

Check available room and eligibility before contributing, especially for FHSA and TFSA timing.

Related content

Use these next

Each guide points to one practical calculator and two related guides so the next step stays educational instead of promotional.

How this article was prepared

Last updated: April 29, 2026

This article compares Canadian registered accounts using contribution mechanics, withdrawal treatment, deduction value, and goal fit. It uses simplified examples rather than personalized account-order advice.

Assumptions

  • FHSA annual room is discussed using an $8,000 reference and a $40,000 lifetime limit.
  • TFSA 2026 annual room is discussed using a $7,000 reference.
  • RRSP value depends on marginal tax rate today versus future withdrawal years.

Sources and review

Self-reviewed by: Gourav Kumar

Checked against official Canadian source material where applicable; not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional unless explicitly stated.

Educational comparison only. The right order depends on income, room, home timeline, retirement plan, cash flow, and tax situation.

Official sources

Official Canadian sources to verify

These primary references help readers verify the Canadian rules, limits, and tax treatment discussed in this guide.

Review note

Educational content, source-led review

This page is written for Canadian readers and reviewed against official or primary sources where the topic depends on rules, tax treatment, or account mechanics. The goal is to explain the decision, not to recommend a product or predict returns.

Last reviewed: April 29, 2026How we review content

Author and review

GK

Gourav Kumar

Founder of Easy Finance Tools

Independent Canadian personal finance tools creator focused on calculators, investing education, and beginner-friendly financial planning. Not a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional.

How this content is handled

Content is educational, reviewed against official Canadian sources where applicable, and updated when account rules, calculator assumptions, or source material changes. It is not professional financial advice.

Editorial standardsCalculator methodologyUpdated: April 29, 2026TFSA | RRSP | FHSA

Educational disclaimer

This article is educational only and is not financial, investment, tax, mortgage, or legal advice. Account priority depends on personal facts, contribution room, eligibility, and future plans.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Should FHSA come before TFSA and RRSP?

If you are eligible and a first home is a realistic goal, FHSA often deserves first consideration. If not, compare TFSA and RRSP normally.

Is TFSA better than RRSP?

Not always. TFSA is often better for flexibility and lower income; RRSP can be better when your current tax rate is high and retirement is the goal.

Can I use all three accounts?

Yes. Many Canadians eventually use FHSA for a first home, TFSA for flexibility and tax-free growth, and RRSP for retirement deduction planning.

What account should beginners open first?

Beginners should start with the goal and contribution room. If unsure, TFSA is often flexible, but eligible home buyers should learn FHSA rules early.

Does contribution room expire?

TFSA and RRSP unused room can carry forward. FHSA room starts after opening and has its own carryforward and lifetime-limit rules.

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