Hi Peace,
This can be a useful planning idea, but it needs to be handled carefully.
From the Canadian tax side, a direct transfer from an FHSA to your own RRSP or RRIF can generally be done without immediate Canadian tax. It also generally does not use RRSP room, provided the transfer is done properly as a direct transfer and there is no excess FHSA amount.
From the U.S. tax side, the analysis is less straightforward. The IRS has clear treaty-based relief for certain Canadian retirement plans such as RRSPs and RRIFs, but that published relief does not clearly extend to FHSAs. IRS guidance on treaty deferral procedures specifically refers to RRSPs, RRIFs, registered pension plans, and DPSPs.
So, in practical terms:
1.Does moving money from an FHSA to an RRSP trigger tax?=
- Canada: usually no immediate tax if it is a proper direct transfer.
- U.S.: there is no clear IRS guidance saying an FHSA-to-RRSP transfer is ignored for U.S. purposes. Because the U.S. does not clearly recognize the FHSA as tax-deferred, there may still be U.S. tax reporting and analysis required before and after the transfer. This is an area where professional advice is strongly recommended.
2.If the FHSA already holds PFICs, does the transfer fix the PFIC issue?
Not automatically. If PFIC holdings already existed in the FHSA before you become a U.S. tax resident, the U.S. treatment depends heavily on timing, residency date, elections, and whether there was already U.S. reporting exposure. A transfer to an RRSP may improve the position going forward because RRSPs have stronger treaty support for U.S. deferral, but it does not necessarily erase prior PFIC history or prior reporting concerns. Form 8621 filing rules are still highly fact-specific.
3.After becoming a U.S. tax resident, are there other issues?
Yes. Even where treaty relief is available for an RRSP, Canadian accounts may still need to be reported on forms such as FBAR and Form 8938, depending on thresholds.
4.Is this a valid strategy?
It can be a reasonable strategy in some cases, especially where someone wants to reduce future U.S. issues tied to holding investments in an FHSA after becoming a U.S. resident. But it is not a universal fix. The biggest caution is that the FHSA itself sits in a grey area for U.S. tax purposes, while the RRSP has much stronger treaty footing.
A direct FHSA-to-RRSP transfer is generally fine for Canadian tax purposes, and it may be better than keeping PFIC investments inside an FHSA after you become a U.S. tax resident. But it does not automatically eliminate all U.S. PFIC or reporting issues, especially for periods before the transfer or if the timing is not planned properly.
SOCIAL CONNECT