How to Stack Every First-Time Buyer Program on a BC Presale (2026)
FHSA, HBP, BC's newly-built PTT exemption and the new federal GST rebate can all stack on one new presale — saving a first-time buyer over $50,000 in tax. Here's the exact 2026 math.
A first-time buyer purchasing a new presale in BC can stack four separate programs on one home — the FHSA, the Home Buyers' Plan, BC's newly-built-home property transfer tax exemption, and the new federal first-time-buyer GST rebate. On a $750,000 presale condo in 2026 that combination wipes out roughly $50,500 in tax and lets a couple assemble up to ~$200,000 of down payment tax-efficiently. The catch: two of these programs cancel each other out, and most buyers pick the wrong one.
Presales are where this stacking pays off most, because a brand-new home unlocks two perks a resale buyer never sees: the newly-built PTT exemption and the federal GST rebate. Here's exactly how the four programs fit together for 2026, with the math.
The four programs you can stack in 2026
| Program | 2026 limit | What it does | Pay it back? |
|---|---|---|---|
| FHSA (First Home Savings Account) | $8,000/yr · $40,000 lifetime | Contributions are tax-deductible; growth and withdrawals for a first home are tax-free | No |
| HBP (Home Buyers' Plan) | $60,000 per person | Withdraw from your RRSP tax-free for a down payment | Yes — over 15 years, starting year 5 |
| BC newly-built home PTT exemption | Full to $1,100,000 FMV | Eliminates the BC property transfer tax on a qualifying new home | No |
| Federal FTHB GST rebate | 100% to $1M (max $50,000) | Refunds the 5% federal GST on a new home from a builder | No |
The FHSA and HBP can be used together for the same home — the CRA confirms you can draw from both as long as you meet each program's conditions at the time of withdrawal. A couple where both partners qualify can therefore combine up to $80,000 of FHSA + $120,000 of HBP = ~$200,000 toward one down payment, much of it tax-deductible going in.
The trap: BC has two PTT exemptions, and you can only use one
This is where most first-time buyers leave money on the table. BC offers a first-time home buyers' PTT exemption (full only up to $500,000 of value, partial to $835,000) and a separate newly-built home exemption (full up to $1,100,000). You cannot claim both on the same purchase — you pick one.
On a resale, first-timers default to the first-time exemption. But on a new presale, the newly-built exemption is almost always the bigger win, because it exempts the entire purchase price up to $1.1M instead of just the first $500K. Choosing wrong on a $750K condo costs you $5,000.
Tip — don't auto-tick "first-time buyer" on a presale
On a $750,000 new condo, the first-time exemption only erases PTT on the first $500K (about $8,000), leaving $5,000 owing. The newly-built exemption erases the full $13,000. Same buyer, same home, $5,000 difference — decided by which box your conveyancer checks at completion.
Worked example: a $750,000 presale condo, first-time-buyer couple
Assume a presale agreement signed on or after March 20, 2025 (the eligibility date for the new GST rebate), completing in 2026 at a $750,000 price.
| Tax / cost line | Without stacking | With the right programs | You save |
|---|---|---|---|
| BC Property Transfer Tax (1% to $200K + 2% above) | $13,000 | $0 (newly-built exemption) | $13,000 |
| 5% federal GST on the new home | $37,500 | $0 (FTHB GST rebate, full refund under $1M) | $37,500 |
| Tax eliminated at completion | — | — | $50,500 |
On top of that $50,500 in eliminated tax, the down-payment side compounds. If each partner has built a $40,000 FHSA, those contributions were deductible — at a ~30% marginal rate that's roughly $24,000 in income-tax refunds on the way in, and the growth comes out tax-free. Add up to $120,000 of HBP and the couple can fund a 20%+ down payment ($150,000 on this unit) largely with tax-advantaged dollars.
The stack that actually works on a presale
FHSA + HBP for the down payment (combinable) → newly-built PTT exemption (not the first-time one) → federal GST rebate refunds the 5% GST. All four apply to the same new home. Total on the example: ~$50,500 of tax gone plus ~$24,000 in FHSA refunds and ~$200,000 of tax-efficient down-payment capacity.
The fine print that disqualifies people
GST rebate eligibility
At least one buyer must be a first-time buyer (no home owned/occupied in the year of purchase or the four prior calendar years), it must be your primary residence, and the agreement must be signed on or after March 20, 2025 and before 2031. You can't cancel and re-sign an older contract to qualify — that's blocked by anti-avoidance rules.
PTT exemptions
The newly-built exemption requires you move in within 92 days and live there a full year. Both BC exemptions require Canadian citizenship or permanent residency. Above $1.1M (newly-built) the exemption phases out and is gone by $1.15M.
FHSA timing
You need an open FHSA to use it — and contribution room only starts the year you open the account. Opening one early (even with $0) starts the clock so room accumulates before you buy.
HBP repayment
The $60,000 is a loan from yourself: repayment spreads over 15 years beginning the fifth year after withdrawal. Miss a yearly repayment and that portion is added to your taxable income.
What a presale specialist watches for
Because we only represent buyers — never developers — our job at completion is to make sure your conveyancer claims the larger exemption, that your GST rebate is filed correctly on the new-home purchase, and that your FHSA was opened early enough to matter. These savings are real, but they're claimed by you, not handed to you. A presentation-centre rep works for the builder and won't optimize your personal tax stack; that's the gap we close.
Want help mapping these to a specific budget? See our deep dive on the new GST rebate, browse presale condos under $500K in the Fraser Valley, or explore current presale condos in Surrey.
The Bottom Line
A first-time buyer on a new BC presale can stack the FHSA, HBP, the newly-built PTT exemption, and the federal GST rebate on a single home. On a $750,000 condo that's about $50,500 of eliminated tax plus a far cheaper down payment — provided you pick the newly-built PTT exemption (not the first-time one), sign on or after March 20, 2025, and open your FHSA early. Book a free 15-min call and we'll map every program to your exact numbers.