Tag Archives: Home Buyer’s Plan

How much would the Home Buyers’ Plan help in your market?

 

By Penelope Graham, Zoocasa

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

For those trying to scrape together a down payment in Canada’s hottest housing markets, the Home Buyer’s Plan is known as an effective tool. Offered by the federal government, it allows first-time buyers to pull funds from the RRSPs completely tax-free to put toward their home down payment. If you’re lucky enough to have RRSP matching via your employer, or have been saving for retirement for some time, it can seem an especially attractive method to amass down payment funds.

However, there are a few restrictions buyers should be aware of:

  • Buyers must have a signed Agreement of Purchase and Sale to buy or build a property before applying to access the funds.
  • They can pull up to a limit of $35,000 from an individual’s RRSP, and up to a combined $70,000 from RRSPs held by two individuals buying together (assuming the funds are saved in the first place).
  • The funds must have been sheltered within the RRSP for a minimum of 90 days before they can be accessed.
  • Buyers are required to “pay themselves back”, contributing one fifteenth of the withdrawn amount on an annual basis over a 15-year timeline, or be taxed on that portion at their full rate.
  • Buyers must qualify as “first timers,” which the Government of Canada defines as not having owned a home, or occupied one that your spouse has owned, in the four consecutive years before this home purchase is made. (However, there are exceptions in the case of a marriage or common-law relationship breakdown where former partners can restore their first-time buyer status.)
  • Buyers must intend to dwell in the home as their permanent residence within one year of its purchase or completion.

How long would it take to actually save for the HBP?

Assuming a buyer satisfies all the criteria above, they also need to actually save the funds in the RRSP in order to use them for their home purchase: and that’s easier said than done in some urban centres than others.

To see how long it would take to actually set aside the maximum $35,000 in an RRSP, Zoocasa sourced individual income thresholds in 14 cities across the nation. The data was based on 2017 tax filings as reported by Statistics Canada, and assumed the income was earned income, eligible to create RRSP contribution room, and that individuals contributed the maximum to their RRSP annually (18% of earned income, to a maximum of $26,500). The study also compared how long it would take for those in the top 50%, 25%, and 10% income groups to save $35,000.
According to the findings, for a median-income household contributing the max amount to an RRSP, it would take between 4.3 – six years to pull together $35,000.

(See Infographic at the top of this blog).

How far would $35,000 go in your Housing market?

As well, the extent that the maximum HBP funds would actually aid in a home purchase varies across Canada; it’s no surprise that in the priciest markets, such as homes for sale in Toronto or Vancouver, that it’s hardly a drop in the bucket – just 4.3% and 3.5% of a benchmark home price, respectively. Continue Reading…

How has the Home Buyers’ plan Changed?

By Penelope Graham, Zoocasa

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Of the tax breaks and incentives offered to first-time home buyers in Canada, the Home Buyers’ Plan is likely the most utilized; the program, which allows qualifying buyers to pull, tax-free, funds earmarked for retirement from their RRSPs for a home purchase, has steadily grown in popularity since it was first introduced back in 1992.

Eligibility for the program is fairly straightforward; first, the prospective buyer must have some funds saved in an RRSP. They must also be classified as a first-time home buyer, meaning they do not own, or have owned, a principal residence in Canada within the last four years.

The funds must be sheltered within the RRSP account for a minimum of 90 days before they can be withdrawn for the HBP, and the money must be paid back within a 15-year timeline, to kick in the calendar year after the withdrawal is made, in installments of one-fifteenth of the total amount.

While the program is structured to allow home buyers to tap into their retirement funds, it also ensures they pay themselves back; should one of the 15 installments be missed, that portion of the withdrawal funds loses its tax-free status, which the buyer will see reflected in their income tax bill.

However, there are some new changes afoot for the HBP, as announced as part of the federal budget in March, including the program’s first maximum expansion in a decade, and a tweak of the rules to improve eligibility for more home buyers. Let’s take a look at what’s new.

New maximum withdrawal now $35,000

As of March 19, the maximum withdrawal amount for the HBP has been expanded to $35,000, up from $25,000, where it had remained since 2009. This also means that, if a couple is purchasing a home together and both qualify as first-time home buyers, each could theoretically withdraw $35,000, to a combined total of $70,000; an amount that will give buyers greater pull in expensive markets, such as those buying homes for sale in Toronto. Continue Reading…