

How to Use Your RRSP and the Home Buyers’ Plan to Buy Your First Home in 2026
We speak to many buyers who dream of buying their first home in Canada, and we know that your first home may feel out of reach right now. Saving up for a down payment on top of rent and closing costs in today’s tough economy can feel overwhelming or impossible.
In this article, we’re going to talk about how to use your Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) together with the Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) to generate usable cash and shorten your timeline to purchase.
The goal is to show you how the rules work this year so you can structure your plan and act before the spring or summer of 2026.
We know that this article may contain a lot of information, so if you are still confused or have additional questions after reading this guide, feel free to reach out to us directly, and we’ll be happy to help you further.
If you’re a first-time homebuyer, we suggest you read this article first: What You Need To Know As A First-Time Homebuyer.
Why Now Matters: RRSP Deadline for 2025 Tax Year
The deadline to contribute to your RRSP and claim the deduction on your 2025 tax return is March 2, 2026. If you make contributions by that date, you can use those contributions on your 2025 taxes and expect a tax refund in spring 2026. This refund can go toward your homebuying plan, including a larger down payment or your closing costs.
What the Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) Actually Is
The Home Buyers’ Plan is a federal program that lets eligible first-time homebuyers withdraw up to $60,000 from their RRSP without immediate tax, as long as they repay it over time. You don’t pay tax on the withdrawal itself (because it isn’t considered income), but you have to pay the money back within 15 years.
That means your retirement savings can become working cash for your down payment or closing costs. If you’re buying with a partner and you both qualify, you could double that amount.
To withdraw under the HBP, you must:
- Plan to buy or build a qualifying home for yourself (or a related disabled person).
- Intend to occupy the home as your principal residence.
- Complete CRA Form T1036, Home Buyers’ Plan Request to Withdraw Funds from an RRSP, with your RRSP issuer.
- Be a first-time homebuyer or meet the CRA’s first-time criteria.
A lot of people are surprised to learn that you can buy more than one home and still be considered a first-time homebuyer. According to the Canada Revenue Agency, you are considered a first-time home buyer if all of the following are true:
- You did not own and live in another qualifying home in the current year or in the previous four calendar years.
- A “qualifying home” includes any home you owned and occupied as your principal residence, whether alone or jointly.
- If you owned a home in the past but did not live in it as your principal residence, that ownership alone does not automatically disqualify you.
- If you previously owned a home with a spouse or common-law partner, and lived in it as your principal residence, you are not considered a first-time buyer until the four-year rule is satisfied.
- If you are buying with a spouse or partner, each person’s first-time status is assessed individually.
- You must be a resident of Canada at the time you withdraw funds under the HBP.
- You must intend to buy or build a qualifying home and occupy it as your principal residence within one year of purchase or completion.
Here is some clarification that often causes confusion:
- The four-year period is counted as four full calendar years, not four years from the sale date.
- Renting, living with family, or living in a partner’s home does not reset or violate first-time buyer status unless you owned and lived in that home.
- There is a separate exception that may allow HBP use for individuals experiencing a breakdown of a marriage or common-law partnership, even if they owned a home before.
If you want the official CRA reference page that explains this in full detail (including examples), it’s here: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/individuals/topics/rrsps-related-plans/what-home-buyers-plan.html
The Cash Flow Logic That Actually Works in 2026
Here are the steps you need to follow for this year:
- Make RRSP contributions before March 2, 2026 and plan to claim them on your 2025 taxes. This sets you up for a refund in 2026.
- File your tax return early in 2026 to get your refund as soon as possible.
- Use that refund as part of your savings toward your purchase.
- When you’re ready to close on a qualifying home, withdraw up to $60,000 under the HBP to supplement your down payment.
Many buyers underestimate that an RRSP refund becomes a liquid cash event you can plan around. When you add this refund to an HBP withdrawal, it creates real buying power without tax.
Key Rules You Can’t Ignore
To actually make this strategy work:
- The funds you withdraw under the HBP must have been in your RRSP long enough (generally at least 90 days) before you withdraw them.
- You must complete your HBP withdrawal in the calendar year of your home purchase (or January of the year after).
- If you don’t buy/build your home by the deadline the CRA sets (usually before October 1 of the year after your withdrawal), you may have to repay or cancel the HBP participation.
There are many moving parts, so you need to plan contributions, tax filings, pre-approvals, and closing dates to match your cash flow. Again, if you need help with planning, we are here to help you.
Repayment: A 15-Year Commitment
Although the HBP feels like an interest-free loan today, it becomes a repayment plan tomorrow. You have up to 15 years to repay everything you withdrew, in installments.
Usually, you start repaying in the second year after the year you withdrew, and must put back at least 1/15th of the total each year.
If you don’t make the required repayment in a given year, the amount you missed gets added to your taxable income for that year.
You can read more about how repayments work here: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/individuals/topics/rrsps-related-plans/what-home-buyers-plan/repay-funds-withdrawn-rrsp-s-under-home-buyers-plan.html
How RE/MAX Team Paliwal Uses This Strategy With Our Clients
From our experience working with buyers in the Greater Golden Horseshoe, a surprising number qualify for the HBP but don’t think through the timing that can turn this into a buying opportunity for the year.
The key is coordinating tax planning, contribution timing, and mortgage readiness so you’ve got cash ready in your account when you find a property you want to submit an offer on.
When we work with first-time buyers, we make sure every one of our recommendations addresses:
- Your RRSP contribution room and how last-minute contributions can be used effectively.
- Your expected refund timing and how that plays into your offer strategy.
- Your mortgage pre-approval timeline so you’re ready when the refund and HBP money are available to you.
This strategy enhances your savings and gets you closer to owning a home now, rather than sometime in the unforeseeable future.
Quick Action Checklist for First Time Home Buyers in 2026
Before you go any further, make sure you do this:
- Check your CRA My Account to confirm your RRSP contribution room.
- Contribute to your RRSP before March 2, 2026 if you want to claim on your 2025 taxes.
- File your tax return early in 2026 so you get your refund sooner.
- Talk to a mortgage professional about aligning your pre-approval with your refund and HBP plan.
- If you plan to withdraw under the HBP, ask your advisor about Form T1036 and your eligibility.
Remember, You’re Not Alone
RE/MAX Team Paliwal is a small team of highly accomplished real estate agents with more than 40+ years of combined experience in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Area. Our reputation for a thorough process attracts many first-time homebuyers, but we also work with all buyers and sellers aiming to upgrade their homes.
After hundreds of successful deals, we are fortunate to be one of the most trusted and highly reviewed real estate teams online. You can find all real testimonials and reviews of our team on RankMyAgent.com, a verified review platform by the Canadian Real Estate Association, realtor.ca and RE/MAX.CA
Our team has ranked in the top 50 teams in Canada at RankMyAgent.com for the last 4 years, and our team leader Gyanesh Paliwal is the recipient of RE/MAX International’s Hall of Fame Award, Lifetime Achievement Award, and Titan Club Awards.
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