Use this page to RESP provider comparison

Compare RESP providers by legal promoter name, grant support, plan type, fees, investments, transfers, withdrawal process, and provincial incentive support before you open an account.

Checklist 9 practical checks

Track what is already confirmed before money moves.

Provider script 9 questions

Use the prompts when speaking with a bank, brokerage, or RESP promoter.

Source trail 8 links to verify

Open the official pages before making account or tax decisions.

Choosing an RESP provider is not only about picking a familiar bank or the lowest advertised fee. Official Canada.ca guidance tells families to choose a promoter that meets their needs and to ask in advance which benefits that promoter actually offers.

That matters because the government sets the RESP framework, but the promoter controls the real-world account experience: which grants and bonds can be requested, which plan types are available, what investments you can hold, how transfers are handled, and how smoothly withdrawals are processed when school starts.

The most important early screen is benefit support. The official RESP promoters list shows that not every promoter offers the same combination of basic CESG, additional CESG, Canada Learning Bond, and provincial incentives such as the British Columbia Training and Education Savings Grant.

After benefit support, compare the operational terms that create problems later: fees, contribution rules, investment flexibility, transfer-out friction, and what documents the promoter needs before paying Educational Assistance Payments.

A strong comparison separates government facts from product marketing. Record the legal promoter name, supported incentives, account type, fee schedule, investment menu, transfer process, withdrawal process, and any conditions that could matter if the child changes schools, delays studies, or never uses the full RESP.

Do not treat provider profiles as rankings. The safer use is a shortlist workflow: confirm the official promoter row, read the provider's own current terms, compare the same questions across each option, then choose the account that fits the beneficiary's grants, province, investment comfort, and likely withdrawal timeline.

Start with grant and bond support, not branding

Canada.ca says to ask your promoter before opening the RESP what benefits they offer. That is the right first filter because a provider that does not support a benefit cannot fix that later with better service or a nicer app.

For many families, the key question is whether the promoter supports only the basic CESG or also supports additional CESG, the Canada Learning Bond, and any provincial incentive the beneficiary may still be eligible to receive. Low-income families in particular should treat CLB support as a core requirement, not a nice extra.

Use the official RESP promoters list to confirm support, but do not stop there. The list tells you what the promoter says it offers; your follow-up should confirm whether support applies to the exact account type you plan to open and whether any paperwork or timing issue could delay the benefit request.

Match the sales brand to the legal promoter row

Large financial brands may have more than one RESP promoter row. Canada.ca's list can show separate bank, mutual-fund, brokerage, and wealth-management entities under the same broad brand family. Those rows may not offer the same grant mix.

That means a family's question should be precise: not just 'Does TD, RBC, BMO, Scotia, or another brand offer RESPs?' but 'Which legal promoter will administer this exact account, and which government benefits does that row support?'

This is one reason RESP Guide Canada separates provider profiles by promoter path where possible. A branch account, a mutual-fund account, and a self-directed brokerage RESP can share brand recognition while having different fees, account features, grant support, transfer forms, and withdrawal procedures.

Know which kind of provider you are actually comparing

Official guidance describes RESPs as available through banks, credit unions, investment firms, financial planners, and group plan dealers. Those categories can feel similar in search results while working very differently in practice.

A bank or credit union RESP may feel simpler for families who want branch access or a basic investment menu. A brokerage or self-directed RESP may offer more investment control, but the family then needs to be comfortable choosing and monitoring investments. An advice-based provider may add planning help while also adding product or advisory costs. Group plan dealers need the closest review because contribution schedules, enrolment fees, cancellation terms, and withdrawal rules can be more restrictive than families expect.

Do not compare only the front-end label. Compare the actual plan structure, the investment choices inside it, and how much work the subscriber must do after the account is opened.

Provincial incentives need their own source check

The Canada.ca promoter list is useful for federal benefits and BCTESG, but it is not a complete map of every provincial incentive. Quebec families should also check Revenu Quebec's current QESI provider list because QESI is administered through the Quebec system.

This creates a common comparison trap. A provider can look strong on the federal list but still require separate confirmation for QESI. Another provider may support QESI through one legal entity but not through every branded account path.

If a provincial incentive matters, ask the promoter whether it applies to the exact RESP type, whether applications are automatic or form-based, whether catch-up room can be requested, and how long processing normally takes.

Fees matter, but the fee list is wider than many families expect

Canada.ca's RESP materials encourage families to get information in writing and ask the promoter to explain anything they do not understand before signing. That is especially important for fees because the expensive part of an RESP is not always the line called account fee.

Ask for the full current fee schedule and check for annual administration fees, trading commissions, management expense ratios on funds, advisory fees, transfer-out fees, withdrawal processing limits, and any enrolment, sales, or cancellation charges. A provider with no annual fee can still be expensive if the investment product costs are high or if leaving later is costly.

Also ask which fees are optional and which are unavoidable. A self-directed account may have low fixed account costs but still require trading decisions. A managed or mutual-fund RESP may bundle advice and investments together, which can make comparison harder unless you separate product cost from service value.

Treat group plans as contract review, not just provider comparison

Government and OSC investor-education materials both flag that group plans can work differently from ordinary bank, credit-union, mutual-fund, or brokerage RESPs. The risks are not only investment costs; they can include regular-payment commitments, cancellation rules, plan-specific school-payment rules, and what happens if the beneficiary does not continue after high school.

If a group plan is on the shortlist, ask for the plan summary, prospectus or disclosure, payment schedule, cancellation period, fees, earnings-forfeiture rules, transfer terms, and examples for missed contributions. Then compare that written contract against a simpler individual or family RESP before signing.

The point is not that every group plan is automatically wrong. The point is that the consequences of stopping, transferring, or closing can be more contract-specific, so the family should not evaluate it with the same quick checklist used for a basic savings-account-style RESP.

Check the withdrawal and transfer process before you need it

The managing-an-RESP guidance from Canada.ca focuses on contribution rules, beneficiary changes, transfers, and closing the plan. Those are not edge cases. They are normal parts of the RESP lifecycle, and the provider's process can determine how stressful they become.

Ask how the promoter handles proof of enrolment, how long Educational Assistance Payments usually take, whether contribution withdrawals and EAPs can be separated cleanly, and who can receive each payment. A provider that is easy to open but slow to pay when tuition is due may not be the best provider for your family.

Transfers deserve the same attention. Families sometimes open the first available RESP quickly, then discover years later that another provider has better grant support, lower costs, or easier withdrawals. Before opening the plan, confirm the transfer-out process, possible transfer fees, and whether any product restrictions or group-plan conditions could make a future move harder.

Use a written scorecard so the decision stays factual

Provider marketing can blur the comparison by mixing grants, investing, and service promises into one sales message. A written scorecard keeps the review practical.

For each provider, write down the legal promoter name from the official list, which benefits are supported, the plan type offered, the investment choices, the fee schedule location, the transfer-out policy, the withdrawal documents required, and the service channel you would actually use.

This approach is especially useful when parents and grandparents are considering different promoters, or when a family is choosing between a bank RESP, a brokerage RESP, and a group plan. Once the facts are on one page, the better fit is usually clearer.

Example scorecard fields to copy before opening

A practical provider scorecard should be short enough to finish, but detailed enough to catch the major risks. Use one row per provider and fill the same fields for each option.

For each provider, record: legal promoter name, account path, individual/family/group availability, basic CESG, additional CESG, CLB, BCTESG, QESI or other provincial support, annual account fees, fund or advisory costs, trading costs, transfer-out fees, withdrawal documents, normal withdrawal timeline, transfer timeline, and unresolved questions.

If the family cannot complete the scorecard from public pages and written provider answers, that is useful information. It may mean the provider is still viable, but the family should not mistake an unanswered item for a zero-cost or low-risk item.

Action checklist

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Details that matter

Promoter name

The legal RESP promoter is the organization that administers the plan and requests benefits. The sales brand and the legal promoter name are not always the same thing.

Benefit support

Basic CESG, additional CESG, CLB, and provincial incentives are not supported uniformly across all promoters.

Provincial source check

Canada.ca tracks federal benefits and BCTESG in the promoter table. Quebec families should also check Revenu Quebec's QESI provider list.

Plan type risk

Family, individual, and group RESPs can feel similar at the marketing level but can have very different flexibility and fee consequences.

Fee clarity

Look beyond account fees and include fund costs, advisory costs, trading commissions, transfer-out fees, and cancellation terms.

Withdrawal readiness

The provider's document requirements and payment timelines can matter as much as the investment menu once school begins.

Transfer friction

A provider that is easy to join can still be hard or expensive to leave.

Profile use

Provider profiles are comparison aids, not recommendations. Re-check the provider's own current pages before signing.

Example scenario

Example: A family is choosing between a branch bank RESP, a self-directed brokerage RESP, and a group plan dealer. The bank supports CESG and CLB but offers a narrower investment menu. The brokerage supports the same grants with lower ongoing costs, but the parents would need to choose and manage investments themselves. The group plan has a stricter contract and higher exit risk if contributions stop. The family lives in Quebec, so they also check Revenu Quebec's QESI provider list instead of relying only on the Canada.ca federal promoter table. Once they write down grant support, provincial support, fees, investment control, transfer terms, and withdrawal workflow side by side, the decision becomes much clearer than the marketing made it sound.

Questions to ask a provider

01

What is the legal RESP promoter name for this account?

02

Which benefits are supported for this exact RESP: basic CESG, additional CESG, CLB, and any provincial incentive?

03

If my child may qualify for QESI, BCTESG, or another provincial incentive, which exact account path and forms support it?

04

Do you offer family, individual, group, self-directed, or managed RESP versions, and how do the rules differ?

05

Where is the full current fee schedule, including fund costs, advisory costs, trading costs, transfer-out fees, and any cancellation charges?

06

How are Educational Assistance Payments and contribution withdrawals requested when the child starts school?

07

What proof of enrolment do you require, and how long do withdrawals usually take?

08

If I want to transfer out later, what steps, restrictions, or fees would apply?

09

Can you give me these answers in writing before I sign or fund the RESP?

Open the worksheet RESP Provider Checklist

Compare RESP providers by fees, grants, investment options, transfers, and withdrawals.

Provider next step

RESP Provider Checklist helps you confirm whether a promoter supports the grants, bonds, provincial incentives, fees, and withdrawal process your family needs.

Provider profiles to compare

Related guides

Government explainers to check

Related RESP questions

Related questions answered

Which RESP provider is best?

The best RESP provider is the one that supports the grants your family may need, has clear fees, fits your preferred investment style, and handles withdrawals and transfers well.

Read the full answer

What RESP fees should I ask about?

Ask about annual administration fees, fund or advisory costs, trading commissions, transfer-out fees, enrolment charges, sales charges, and cancellation fees.

Read the full answer

Should I use a bank or brokerage RESP?

A bank RESP may be simpler, while a brokerage RESP may offer more investment control. The better choice depends on grant support, costs, and how much investing responsibility you want.

Read the full answer

What is an RESP promoter?

The promoter is the financial organization that offers and administers the RESP, applies for benefits, and processes withdrawals under the plan.

Read the full answer

How do I confirm provincial RESP incentive support?

Start with official program lists where available, such as Canada.ca for BCTESG support and Revenu Quebec for QESI provider support, then ask the provider whether that support applies to the exact account you plan to open.

Read the full answer

Are group RESPs riskier to compare?

They require a closer contract review because payment schedules, cancellation terms, fees, and withdrawal rules can be more restrictive or plan-specific than a simple bank or brokerage RESP.

Read the full answer

Official sources