Plain-language summary
- An RESP education withdrawal is not approved just because the student is taking any course. The beneficiary must be enrolled at a post-secondary educational institution and must meet either the full-time qualifying-program test or the part-time specified-program test.
- For full-time EAP eligibility, CRA describes a qualifying educational program as post-secondary, at least 3 consecutive weeks long, and requiring at least 10 hours per week of courses or program work.
- For part-time EAP eligibility, CRA describes a specified educational program as post-secondary, at least 3 consecutive weeks long, and requiring at least 12 hours per month on courses in the program. The beneficiary must be at least 16 years old.
- Canadian institutions can include universities, colleges, other designated institutions, and ESDC-certified schools that offer non-credit occupational-skill courses.
- Foreign schools can qualify, but the timing test is different. CRA lists a 13-consecutive-week course rule for foreign post-secondary institutions, with a separate 3-week full-time rule for foreign universities.
Action steps
- Before requesting an EAP, ask the school for proof of enrolment that shows the student's name, program, start date, study load, and whether the program is post-secondary.
- For a Canadian school, check whether the institution is designated or ESDC-certified for the type of program the student is taking.
- Do not rely only on the school name. Confirm that the specific program also meets the RESP rule for length and weekly or monthly course load.
- If the student is part time, confirm they are at least 16 and that the program meets the 12-hours-per-month specified-program test.
- If the student is studying outside Canada, ask the promoter which foreign-school rule it will use and whether the proof must show 13 consecutive weeks or full-time university enrolment for at least 3 consecutive weeks.
- Send the proof to the RESP promoter before counting on the money, because the promoter must decide whether the EAP conditions are met before releasing education payments.
Caveats to watch
- The master list of designated educational institutions is mainly a student-aid list. It is useful for checking designation, but ESDC warns that a listed school does not mean every program at that school qualifies.
- Distance education can still work, but CRA says the beneficiary must meet both parts of the test: enrolment in a qualifying or specified program and enrolment as a student at a post-secondary educational institution.
- A short bootcamp, single workshop, or hobby course may fail the RESP test even if it is useful, because the official rule looks at post-secondary status, length, course load, and institution status.
- Eligible school and program status is separate from reasonable-expense review. A program can qualify for EAP access while the promoter still asks whether a specific cost helps the student further their studies.
- If the student stops attending, EAPs may still be possible for up to 6 months only if the payment would have qualified immediately before enrolment ended and the RESP terms allow it.
Examples
Example: Canadian trade program
A 20-year-old starts a 10-week electrician pre-apprenticeship program at an eligible Canadian institution. If the program is post-secondary or occupational-skills training through an ESDC-certified institution and meets the required course-load test, the promoter may treat the student as EAP-eligible after reviewing proof of enrolment.
Example: part-time adult college course
A 28-year-old takes a part-time college certificate program that runs for 4 months and requires 15 hours of class time per month. Because the beneficiary is over 16 and the program is post-secondary, the program may fit the specified-program rule if the institution and documents support it.
Example: foreign short course
A student enrols in a 6-week non-university course outside Canada and asks for RESP grant money. The family should not assume it qualifies. CRA's foreign-school wording generally points to a 13-consecutive-week course rule for foreign post-secondary institutions, except for the separate full-time foreign university rule.
What this means in real life
- The practical test has two parts: the school has to fit, and the program has to fit.
- Families often check only whether the student was accepted, but the RESP promoter needs enough proof to classify the withdrawal correctly.
- The highest-risk cases are private career colleges, short courses, part-time studies, online programs, foreign schools, and programs that do not clearly issue a degree, diploma, certificate, or occupational credential.
What to ask the school
- Are you a designated post-secondary institution or an ESDC-certified institution for this program?
- Is this specific program considered post-secondary or occupational-skills training?
- How many consecutive weeks does the program run?
- How many hours per week or per month does the program require for courses, labs, practical training, or program work?
- Can your proof-of-enrolment letter show the details the RESP promoter needs?
What to ask your RESP promoter
- Will this school and program support an Educational Assistance Payment?
- Will you classify the student as full-time under the qualifying-program rule or part-time under the specified-program rule?
- For online or distance studies, what proof do you need to show both enrolment and post-secondary institution status?
- For a foreign school, which rule are you applying and what minimum course length must the documents show?
- If the student recently stopped attending, does your RESP contract allow the 6-month post-enrolment EAP window?