Business taxes

Should A Business Owner Contribute to Saving for First Home (RRSP and First Home Savings Account FHSA)?

February 8, 2025 · Back to Blog

I hear this question a lot and it isn’t a one size fits all for business owners.  While we might have been historically taught to save for retirement and own a house, depending on your business goals this might be a conflicting objective.

I have discussions with clients all the time who are Amazon sellers, Shopify sellers and other business owners “I want to save for a house, so what should I put in for my RRSP”?

What is the conflict?

Do I save for a house or invest in my business?

When you contribute to an RRSP or FHSA, that may help save/defer some personal income taxes now, but that cash will not be available for the business to use.  Putting $1,000 in an RRSP doesn’t save you $1,000 in taxes, it will save you now, whatever tax rate you are at.  Simple math, say you make $90,000 a year and your tax rate is 31.48%, putting $1,000 in an RRSP will save you about $314.80 in taxes.  Putting $1,000 in an RRSP is $1,000 you can’t use in your business.  Now if you paid the 31.48% in tax on the $1,000 that would leave you with about $685.20 after the tax is paid.  While no on likes to pay taxes, that would leave you with some cash to reinvest in your business.

Amazon and Shopify businesses that require inventory is a capital-intensive business.  You need cash for inventory, fees, PPC and more.

If you contribute too much to savings accounts, will that limit your cash flow and ability to scale your business next year?  Will that cost your business and the long term earnings from the business?  Would putting too much into savings restrict the long term?

On the flip side, keeping too much in your business and growing, that means delaying your personal financial goals like homeownership, and if that is a goal of the business, then maybe there needs to be a balance.

I also hear there are lots are sellers who sometimes focus too much on growing and reinvesting and not taking money out for themselves and enjoying the fruits of their labour, such as home ownership.

Comparing the Two Options

 

Factor Investing in Business Saving in RRSP/FHSA
Potential Return High (if the business scales well) Moderate (RRSP/FHSA investments depend on market performance)
Liquidity Cash is tied up in inventory, harder to access RRSP funds locked unless used for Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP); FHSA is tax-free but requires home purchase
Risk Business could fail or slow down RRSP/FHSA investments are diversified, lower risk
Tax Benefits Business expenses lower taxable income RRSP contributions lower taxable income; FHSA allows tax-free home savings

Finding a Balance

What’s the Best Move for You?

Ok so to develop the right financial strategy for balancing your business growth with saving for a first home, let’s break this down into a few steps.  These are just some thoughts to get you thinking and not telling you an exact mix to follow.

  1. Look At Your Business Financial Health

Before deciding how much to put into an RRSP or FHSA, determine:

👉 If your business is in rapid growth mode → prioritize reinvestment.
👉 If your business is generating strong, steady profits → consider moving some funds into tax-advantaged savings.

  1. Understanding the Tax & Investment Benefits

FHSA (First Home Savings Account)

RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan)

Which One Should You Prioritize?

  1. A Potential Allocation Strategy (Balancing Business & Savings)

Situation Strategy
Business is growing, needs cash Reinvest 80%+ of profits into inventory & marketing, contribute small amounts to FHSA (e.g., $100-$500/month).
Business is stable & profitable Reinvest 60-70%, contribute $8,000 per year to FHSA (max), and small RRSP contributions for tax benefits.
Business is very profitable Reinvest 50-60%, contribute $8,000 to FHSA, and consider RRSP (especially if in a high tax bracket).
  1. Tax Optimization Thoughts

  1. Example Plan for an Amazon Seller (Hypothetical) Simple Math

Let’s assume:

Suggested Cash Allocation:

This keeps the business growing while also building tax-advantaged home savings.

Final Thoughts

  1. Business cash flow comes first – Ensure you have enough liquidity for inventory and operations.
  2. Max out the FHSA ($8,000/year) if possible – Best way to save for a house tax-free.
  3. RRSP can help reduce taxes, but prioritize it if you’re in a high tax bracket or need the Home Buyers’ Plan.
  4. Avoid over-contributing to RRSP/FHSA if it means starving your business of cash.
  5. If business is growing fast, reinvest more and save aggressively for a home later.

 

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