How to use this page: Read the simplified explanation first, then use the official links below before acting.

Plain-language summary

Action steps

  1. Check the child's exact age today. If the child is already 9 or older, the normal BCTESG application window has likely closed.
  2. Confirm that both the child and the applying parent or guardian are B.C. residents right now and that the child has a valid SIN.
  3. Ask your RESP provider whether it supports BCTESG specifically, not just CESG or CLB.
  4. If your current provider does not support BCTESG, ask whether opening a second RESP with a participating promoter is the fastest way to claim it before the deadline.
  5. After applying, verify that the $1,200 grant was actually deposited instead of assuming the form was enough.

Caveats to watch

Examples

Example: eligible child with no new contribution

A B.C. child turns 7 in 2026 and already has an RESP at a promoter that supports BCTESG. The parent does not add any new contribution, but applies for the provincial grant. The child can still receive the one-time $1,200 because the grant does not require a matching deposit.

Example: family misses the provider check

A child is 8 years and 10 months old and already has an RESP, but the existing provider does not support BCTESG. If the family waits too long to confirm that detail, the application window can close before they move or open an eligible RESP elsewhere.

What this means in real life

What to ask your provider

Official sources