πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ CRA Verified2026 Limits$8K/Year$40K LifetimeManitobaFree

Manitoba FHSA Calculator 2026

Calculate your First Home Savings Account tax savings in Manitoba. Manitoba uses a progressive provincial tax structure with a top rate of 17.4%. Federal + provincial deduction. First-time home buyers only.

$8,000
Annual limit
$40,000
Lifetime limit
17.4%
Manitoba top rate
$3,200/yr
Max at 40% rate
FHSA Tax Savings Calculator
First Home Savings Account: up to $8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime. Tax deductible like RRSP.
Tax savings
$3,031
Effective rate: 37.9% on contribution
Take-home without FHSA$56,558
Take-home with FHSA$51,589
Remaining lifetime room$32,000

Annual limit: $8,000 (up to $16,000 with full carryforward). Lifetime limit: $40,000. Must be first-time home buyer.

FHSA tax savings in Manitoba

Your FHSA tax savings in Manitoba depend on your combined marginal rate (federal + Manitoba provincial). Manitoba uses a progressive provincial tax structure with a top marginal rate of 17.4%. Combined federal + provincial rates range from roughly 20% to over 50% depending on income.

Manitoba's bracket thresholds are frozen for 2026. Most first-time buyers earning $47,000–$100,000 face a combined marginal rate of 26.75–33.25%, making each $8,000 FHSA contribution worth approximately $2,140–$2,660 in tax savings.

Manitoba provincial tax brackets 2026

Combined rates below are approximate (federal 2026 brackets + Manitoba provincial). Your actual marginal rate depends on all income sources.

Manitoba rateTaxable incomeCombined rate
10.80%$0 – $47,00024.8%
12.75%$47,001 – $100,00026.75%
17.40%$100,001+37.9%

FHSA vs RRSP vs TFSA for first home

FeatureFHSARRSP (HBP)TFSA
Tax deductionβœ“ Yesβœ“ Yesβœ— No
Tax-free growthβœ“ Yesβœ— Noβœ“ Yes
Tax-free withdrawalβœ“ First homeβœ— Must repayβœ“ Any time
Limit$8K/yr Β· $40K$60K HBPAnnual room
Repaymentβœ— Noneβœ“ 15 yearsβœ— None

FHSA limits & rules

Annual contribution limit: $8,000 (may be indexed to inflation in future)
Lifetime contribution limit: $40,000
Unused room carryforward: Up to $8,000 per year to the following year
Maximum participation period: 15 years from the year the account was opened
Eligibility: Canadian resident, 18+, first-time home buyer
If no home purchased: Transfer to RRSP/RRIF tax-free without affecting RRSP room

Manitoba housing programs & FHSA tips

  • Manitoba First Time Home Buyers' Tax Credit β€” up to $1,750 provincial tax savings
  • Manitoba LTT rebate up to $4,500 for first-time buyers
  • Winnipeg average home price well below national average
  • Manitoba bracket thresholds are frozen for 2026
How we calculate FHSA tax savings
Step-by-step breakdown of tax savings and contribution limits shown in the calculator above. Last reviewed 2026-06-22.

The tax savings, take-home amounts, and remaining FHSA room above come from the salary, province, filing status, and contribution you enterβ€”not a third-party feed. FHSA contributions are tax-deductible like RRSP contributions. We cap your entry to annual and lifetime limits (including carryforward), then run the Canada paycheck tax engine twice: at full salary and with taxable income reduced by the deductible FHSA amount. Below are the formulas, the order we follow, and worked examples you can check by hand.

Formulas

LineFormula
Max annual contribution room$8,000 new room + up to $8,000 carryforward from prior year
Capped FHSA contributionmin(entered amount, annual room, lifetime room remaining)
Taxable income with FHSAmax(0, annual salary βˆ’ capped FHSA contribution)
Total tax without FHSAFederal + provincial tax + CPP/QPP + EI + Ontario Health Premium (if ON)
Total tax with FHSASame engine on (salary βˆ’ capped FHSA contribution)
FHSA tax savingsTotal tax without FHSA βˆ’ total tax with FHSA
Effective rate on contributionTax savings Γ· capped FHSA contribution
Remaining lifetime room$40,000 βˆ’ prior-year contributions βˆ’ this year's capped contribution
Net cost of contributionFHSA contribution βˆ’ tax savings

Order of operations

1

Cap contribution to FHSA limits

Annual max $8K + carryforward; lifetime max $40K total

We first apply CRA FHSA limits. You can contribute up to $8,000 per year plus unused room carried forward from the prior year (max $8,000 carryforward). Lifetime contributions cannot exceed $40,000 minus amounts already contributed in prior years.

2

Calculate tax at full salary

Run calculateTax(salary) for your province and filing status

Federal brackets, provincial brackets, Basic Personal Amount credits, CPP or QPP, EI, and Ontario Health Premium are computed on your full annual salary before any FHSA deduction.

3

Calculate tax after FHSA deduction

Run calculateTax(salary βˆ’ capped FHSA contribution)

FHSA contributions reduce taxable income dollar-for-dollar, similar to RRSP deductions. CPP and EI bases also fall slightly because pensionable earnings decrease.

4

Compute tax savings and effective rate

Savings = tax without βˆ’ tax with; rate = savings Γ· contribution

The difference is your estimated annual tax savings. The effective rate approximates your combined marginal federal and provincial savings on the contribution.

5

Report remaining room

Lifetime and annual limits minus contributions used

We show how much lifetime FHSA room remains after this contribution and how much of the current year's $8,000 new room is left (carryforward is tracked separately in the calculator inputs).

Worked example

$80,000 salary Β· $8,000 FHSA Β· Single Β· Manitoba Β· 2026

Contribution used: $8,000

Tax without FHSA on $80,000 = $23,442

Tax with $8,000 FHSA (taxable $72,000) = $20,411

$23,442 βˆ’ $20,411 = $3,031 tax savings (37.9% effective rate)

Net cost: $8,000 βˆ’ $3,031 savings = $4,969 out of pocket

Remaining lifetime room: $32,000 Β· Annual new-room remaining: $0

Line itemAmount
Annual salary$80,000
FHSA contribution (capped)$8,000
ProvinceManitoba
Total tax without FHSA$23,442
Total tax with FHSA$20,411
Tax savings$3,031
Effective rate on contribution37.9%
Net cost of contribution$4,969
Take-home without FHSA$56,558
Take-home with FHSA$51,589
Remaining lifetime room$32,000
Annual new-room remaining$0

Provincial rates change your savings: $8,000 saves $3,043 in Ontario vs $2,811 in Alberta at $80,000 salary.

Carryforward: Full carryforward: up to $16,000 in one year ($8K new + $8K carried forward) β†’ $16,000 contributed, saves $5,807.

Lifetime cap: Lifetime cap: $35,000 prior contributions β†’ only $5,000 room left β†’ capped to $5,000.

Constants we use

ParameterWhat we use
Annual FHSA contribution limit$8,000
Lifetime FHSA contribution limit$40,000
Max carryforward from prior year$8,000
Calculator default salary$80,000
Calculator default contribution$8,000
First-time buyer eligibilityNot validated here

What we do not model on this page

We estimate tax savings from the deduction onlyβ€”we do not validate first-time home buyer eligibility, qualifying home purchase rules, tax-free withdrawal conditions, transfers from RRSP to FHSA, RRSP Home Buyers' Plan stacking, account closure by the 15th anniversary, or investment growth inside the FHSA. Withdrawals for non-qualifying purposes and transfers to RRSP/RRIF are not modeled. Quebec abatement and provincial surtaxes use the same engine as our Canada paycheck calculator. FHSA withdrawals do not restore contribution room unlike TFSA.

Frequently asked questions β€” Manitoba

Yes. Manitoba offers a First-Time Home Buyers' Tax Credit on the provincial return β€” up to $1,750 in provincial tax savings on up to $10,000 of eligible home purchase costs. This is separate from the federal First-Time Home Buyers' Tax Credit and can be claimed in the same year you close on your first home, alongside any FHSA withdrawals.

Yes. Manitoba charges a Land Transfer Tax (LTT) of 0.5%–2% depending on purchase price. First-time buyers can claim a rebate of up to $4,500 on the Manitoba LTT if the home is their principal residence and they have not owned a home before. FHSA funds can be used for the down payment, reducing your mortgage while the LTT rebate offsets closing costs.

$8,000 per year, $40,000 lifetime. Unused room carries forward (max $8,000 per year). Must be a first-time home buyer, Canadian resident, aged 18+.

Canadian residents 18+ who are first-time home buyers. Manitoba residents qualify if they haven't owned a qualifying home in the year of opening or the four prior calendar years.

Yes. You can use both for the same home purchase. FHSA withdrawals are completely tax-free with no repayment requirement. RRSP HBP withdrawals must be repaid over 15 years. You can combine both for a larger down payment.
Official sources
CRA β€” First Home Savings Account (FHSA)

Official FHSA eligibility, limits, and tax treatment.

FCAC β€” First Home Savings Account

Financial Consumer Agency of Canada overview.

Disclaimer: This calculator is for planning only. FHSA rules are governed by the Income Tax Act and CRA guidance. Consult a tax professional for your situation.

Related calculators

2026 FHSA limits
Annual contribution$8,000
Lifetime limit$40,000
Carryforward (unused)Up to $8K/yr
Max participation15 years
Manitoba top rate17.4%
Tax savings by marginal rate
Rate$8K/yr$40K
25%$2,000$10,000
30%$2,400$12,000
35%$2,800$14,000
40%$3,200$16,000
45%$3,600$18,000
50%$4,000$20,000