Understand what parents can control in an RESP, what belongs to the subscriber, what belongs to the student, and where grants, withdrawals, and joint subscribers limit control.
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In RESP language, parent control usually means subscriber control. The subscriber is the person who opens the plan with the promoter, names the beneficiary, makes or authorizes contributions, gives many of the account instructions, and works with the provider when money is paid out.
A parent has that control only if they are the subscriber or joint subscriber. A grandparent, guardian, family friend, separated parent, or public primary caregiver can also be a subscriber in the right setup, so the account documents matter more than the family label.
The control is real, but it is not unlimited. Contributions generally remain under the subscriber's control, while grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and accumulated earnings are governed by RESP rules. Educational Assistance Payments are for the beneficiary's qualifying post-secondary education and are generally taxable to the student.
The best way to think about the RESP is as three control layers: the subscriber controls plan instructions, the promoter administers the registered contract and government rules, and the beneficiary qualifies for education payments when the school and program conditions are met.
That distinction prevents two common mistakes: assuming the child automatically gets the whole RESP at age 18, or assuming the parent can use every RESP dollar like a normal savings account. Neither is the right mental model.
Start with the subscriber, not the word parent
CRA describes an RESP as a contract involving the subscriber and the promoter, with one or more beneficiaries named for future education. That means the adult who controls the practical account is the subscriber under the plan, not automatically every parent of the child.
If both parents are joint subscribers, both may need to follow the provider's joint-instruction rules. If a grandparent opened the RESP, the grandparent is usually the person with account control. If separated parents each open their own RESP, each subscriber controls their own plan, while the child still has one shared lifetime contribution limit across all RESPs.
The provider's account agreement matters here. Families should keep the original application, subscriber names, successor or death instructions if available, and any written agreement between separated parents or family members.
- Parent control exists when the parent is the subscriber or joint subscriber.
- A beneficiary being your child does not automatically make you the subscriber of someone else's RESP.
- Separated parents and grandparents should coordinate before multiple plans create tracking problems.
What the parent subscriber usually controls
The subscriber usually chooses the provider, plan type, contribution schedule, investments available through that provider, beneficiary setup, transfer instructions, and withdrawal requests. The subscriber also coordinates grant applications through the promoter and keeps the contribution history straight.
In a family plan, the subscriber may decide how new contributions are allocated among beneficiaries, subject to plan and family-plan rules. CRA's technical FAQ says family-plan contributions must be assigned to specific beneficiaries.
Control also includes responsibility. If more than one RESP exists for the same child, subscribers need to communicate because the $50,000 lifetime contribution limit applies per beneficiary across all plans, not per account or per adult.
- The subscriber gives many of the account instructions.
- The provider administers those instructions under the RESP contract and tax rules.
- Contribution tracking is a subscriber responsibility, especially across parent and grandparent plans.
What the parent does not fully control
The subscriber does not get to treat grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and investment earnings as ordinary personal savings. Those amounts are tied to RESP rules and often to the beneficiary's education eligibility.
An Educational Assistance Payment is meant to help the beneficiary pursue qualifying post-secondary education. CRA says an EAP includes grants, the Canada Learning Bond, provincial program amounts, and earnings, and the promoter reports EAPs to the student on a T4A slip.
The subscriber also cannot force the promoter to ignore plan terms. Group plans, managed plans, and self-directed accounts can each have different fees, investment choices, withdrawal forms, transfer processes, and documentation requirements.
- Original contributions are different from grants and earnings.
- EAPs are education payments for the beneficiary, not general parent reimbursements.
- Provider rules can be stricter or slower than the family expects.
Does the child get control at 18?
Usually, no. Turning 18 does not automatically make the beneficiary the subscriber or give the student direct control of the RESP. The account is still governed by the subscriber-promoter contract.
The adult student may receive EAPs or contribution amounts when the plan and education conditions are met, and EAPs are generally taxable to the student. But receiving a payment is not the same as owning or controlling the whole account.
Families that want the student involved should plan the workflow before school starts: who requests withdrawals, where payments go, what expenses the money supports, and how the student will keep receipts or tax slips.
- The beneficiary's age does not automatically transfer account control.
- The student can receive qualifying education payments when conditions are met.
- The family should agree on payment destination and records before the first term.
Can parents take RESP money back?
Subscriber contributions are the most flexible bucket. CRA says the promoter can return the subscriber's contributions tax-free, subject to the terms and conditions of the RESP. ESDC's technical material says contributions belong to the subscriber.
That does not mean a contribution withdrawal is always harmless. Canada.ca explains that under normal circumstances, withdrawing contributions can require CESG repayment unless an exception applies, such as the beneficiary being eligible for an EAP.
This is where parents need to slow down. Withdrawing contributions before the child is in school, before a pending grant arrives, or while using multiple RESPs can affect grants or future benefit strategy. Ask the promoter for the grant impact before treating the account like cash.
- Contributions can often be returned tax-free to the subscriber.
- Grant repayment can still happen when contributions are withdrawn.
- The provider should explain which bucket is being withdrawn before money moves.
Separated parents and joint subscribers
CRA guidance says divorced or separated individuals who are both legal parents can jointly open RESPs for one or more children, and former spouses or former common-law partners can be joint subscribers if they are both legal parents of a beneficiary.
That does not solve every operational issue. A provider may need both signatures for certain instructions, and family law agreements may affect who is expected to contribute, who receives returned contributions, or who communicates with the provider.
RESP Guide Canada should not pretend to settle custody or family property disputes. The practical guidance is to keep written contribution records, avoid duplicate contribution surprises, and get legal or tax advice where a separation agreement, court order, or estate issue is involved.
- Former spouses who are both legal parents can be joint subscribers in the right setup.
- Joint subscriber instructions depend on provider process and account terms.
- Contribution tracking matters more when households are not coordinating daily.
How to keep control without creating friction later
Good RESP control is mostly recordkeeping and expectation-setting. Write down who the subscriber is, who can contact the promoter, which benefits are being requested, how contributions are tracked, what the withdrawal plan will be, and what happens if the child changes plans.
Before the child starts school, ask the provider how EAPs and contribution withdrawals are requested, whether payments can go to the subscriber, student, or school, and what proof of enrolment is required.
If grandparents or separated parents are involved, use one shared tracker. It does not need to be complicated. It just needs contribution dates, amounts, beneficiary, provider, grants received, withdrawals, and notes about any transfer or beneficiary change.
- Account control works better when the family has written records.
- Withdrawal control should be planned before tuition deadlines.
- One shared tracker can prevent contribution-limit and grant-order mistakes.
Action checklist
Details that matter
Subscriber is the control role
A parent controls an RESP when the parent is the subscriber or joint subscriber under the plan.
Contributions belong to the subscriber
Technical ESDC material says RESP contributions belong to the subscriber, but withdrawing them can still affect grants.
EAPs are for the student
EAPs include grants and earnings and are intended to help the beneficiary with qualifying post-secondary education.
Age 18 is not automatic control
The beneficiary becoming an adult does not by itself make them the RESP subscriber.
Joint subscribers need process clarity
Spouses and some former spouses can be joint subscribers, but provider signature and instruction rules should be confirmed.
Multiple plans need coordination
More than one RESP can exist for the same beneficiary, but the lifetime contribution limit is still shared across all plans.
Provider terms matter
The RESP contract and provider process control practical details such as signatures, payment routing, fees, and documents.
Example scenario
Example: A student's parents are separated. One parent is the subscriber on an RESP opened years ago, while a grandparent also has a separate RESP for the same child. The child turns 18 and starts college. The parents and grandparent should not assume the student now controls both accounts. Each subscriber should ask their promoter for EAP and contribution-withdrawal rules, coordinate the grant and contribution tracker, and agree what each account will pay before tuition and rent are due.
Questions to ask a provider
Who is listed as subscriber and joint subscriber on this RESP?
Can either subscriber act alone, or do some instructions need both signatures?
Which payments can go to the subscriber, the beneficiary, or the school?
How do you separate contribution withdrawals from EAPs on confirmations and tax slips?
Would withdrawing contributions require CESG, CLB, or provincial incentive repayment?
What happens if the beneficiary changes programs, delays school, or does not attend?
What documents should we keep for beneficiary changes, transfers, subscriber death, or account closure?
Related tool
Open the worksheet RESP Withdrawal ChecklistPrepare documents and questions before requesting RESP withdrawals for school.
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.
Related RESP questions
Related questions answered
Can parents control an RESP?
Parents can control an RESP when they are the subscriber or joint subscriber. If a grandparent or someone else opened the account, that person is usually the subscriber with account control.
Who owns the money in an RESP?
Subscriber contributions generally remain under subscriber control, while grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and earnings are governed by RESP rules and education-payment conditions.
Can the child access the RESP at 18?
Turning 18 does not automatically give the beneficiary control of the RESP. The student can receive qualifying payments when the plan and education rules are met.
Can a parent withdraw RESP contributions?
A parent subscriber may be able to withdraw contributions tax-free, but the withdrawal can trigger grant repayment or other plan consequences if the timing is wrong.