Super Visa Insurance Cost (Canada 2025): Average Rates & Guide
Meta Description: First-Time Home Buyer Incentives 2025 in Canada: FHSA, HBP, HBTC, and a province-by-province down payment (DP) program table with eligibility rules.
Canada’s first-time buyer toolkit in 2025 blends federal tax shelters with provincial transfer-tax relief. Federally, you can combine the First Home Savings Account (FHSA) ($8,000/year; $40,000 lifetime), the Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) (RRSP withdrawals up to $60,000; repay over 15 years), and the Home Buyers’ Amount (HBTC) (claim $10,000, worth up to $1,500 tax reduction). The former federal shared-equity First-Time Home Buyer Incentive is closed to new applications. Provinces add land/property transfer-tax rebates or exemptions, plus a few targeted credits.
FHSA: Contribute up to $8,000/year (max $40,000). Contributions are tax-deductible; qualified home withdrawals are tax-free.
HBP (RRSP): Withdraw up to $60,000 from RRSP for a qualifying home; no withholding on ≤$60,000 after Apr 16, 2024; repay over 15 years. Can be combined with FHSA for the same home if all conditions are met.
HBTC: Claim $10,000 on your return for a qualifying purchase (first-time criteria apply), yielding up to ~$1,500 in federal tax relief.
New GST relief (selected new builds): Federal proposal enables enhanced GST relief for first-time buyers on certain new homes begun on/after May 27, 2025.
Closed: The CMHC First-Time Home Buyer Incentive stopped accepting applications on Mar 21, 2024.
“DP” here emphasizes down-payment-adjacent cost relief (mainly transfer-tax rebates/exemptions) that reduce cash needed at closing.
| Province | Program Type | 2025 Amount / Threshold | Key Eligibility / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Columbia (BC) | Property Transfer Tax (PTT) – First-Time Buyers’ Program | Exempt first $500,000 if FMV ≤ $835,000; partial relief up to $860,000. | Canadian citizen/PR; principal residence; lot ≤0.5 ha; residential use. Apply at registration. |
| Ontario (ON) | Land Transfer Tax (LTT) Refund | Refund up to $4,000 of provincial LTT (Toronto also has its own LTT & separate rebate). | First-time buyer; 18+; occupy within 9 months; additional Toronto municipal rules if buying in Toronto. |
| Québec (QC) | Home Buyers’ Tax Credit (provincial) | Non-refundable credit (commonly up to ~$1,400 per home per WOWA guidance); file form TP-752.HA-V. | Claim on provincial return with the TP-752.HA-V form; first-time criteria apply. |
| Prince Edward Island (PEI) | Real Property Transfer Tax – First-Time Buyer Exemption | Potential full waiver of 1% transfer tax for eligible first-time buyers. | Meet PEI’s first-time & residency/occupancy conditions; see exemption list. |
| Alberta (AB) | No LTT (registration fees only) | No percentage-based LTT; pay Land Title & Mortgage registration fees per formula. | Land titles system under provincial legislation; budget for registration fees instead of LTT. |
| Nova Scotia (NS) | Deed Transfer Tax (municipal); Non-resident deed tax | No provincial FTHB rebate; non-resident deed transfer tax increased to 10% effective Apr 1, 2025. | Municipal DTT rates vary by locality; verify residency status and exemptions. |
| Manitoba (MB) | LTT (no FTHB rebate) | No first-time buyer LTT rebate; separate homeowner tax credit exists for 2025 property tax bills. | Budget for LTT at closing; check 2025 Homeowners Affordability Tax Credit for property tax relief. |
1) Open FHSA before Dec 31: Start building contribution room and deductions early.
2) Estimate cash needed: Use transfer-tax rebates in BC/ON/PEI to reduce upfront DP; AB has no LTT; MB/NS require full payment.
3) Lock HBTC credit: Keep documents for claiming $10,000 HBTC and coordinate HBP timing.
Q1. Can I use FHSA and RRSP HBP together for the same home?
A1. Yes — both can be used if eligibility rules are met.
Q2. Is the federal shared-equity FTHBI still available?
A2. No, it closed to new applications on March 21, 2024.
Q3. Do I pay land transfer tax in Alberta?
A3. No LTT in Alberta, only registration fees apply.
In 2025, stack FHSA + HBP + HBTC federally, then add provincial rebates where available. BC/ON/PEI offer major DP relief; AB avoids LTT entirely, while MB/NS require standard taxes. Confirm eligibility before filing to maximize combined savings.
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