Line 31270 – Home buyers' amount

Home buyers' amount – Personal income tax

The home buyers' amount is a non-refundable tax credit that helps first-time home buyers with some of the costs of purchasing a qualifying home.

This credit reduces the federal income tax you may owe, but you will not get a refund for this credit if you do not have any tax payable.

On this page

Who can claim the home buyers amount

Generally, you can claim the home buyers' amount if you meet all of the following conditions:

You must intend that you, or a related person with a disability, will occupy the home as a principal place of residence no later than one year after it is acquired.

When only one person meets the conditions

If only one spouse or common-law partner meets the conditions, only the spouse or common-law partner who qualifies for the credit can claim the full home buyers' amount on their tax return.

The credit cannot be split between spouses or common-law partners unless both are eligible.

How much you can claim

You can claim up to $10,000 for the purchase of a qualifying home in 2025.

Splitting the credit

If more than one person is eligible for the home buyers' amount for the acquisition of the same home, they can each claim part of the credit.

The credit can be split between:

However, the total of the amounts claimed by all eligible persons for the same home cannot be more than the maximum credit for the year.

Prior years

How to claim

Enter up to $10,000 on line 31270 of your federal tax return if you are not splitting the credit.

Keeping your supporting documents

Do not send any supporting documents when you file your tax return.
Keep them in case the CRA asks to see them later.

 

Forms and publications

Related topics

Page details

2026-01-20