Adults can use an RESP, but the best use case is narrower than the standard parent-saving-for-a-child story. Canada.ca says an adult can open an RESP for themselves, and the beneficiary can also be an adult when the plan is set up correctly.

The subscriber is the person who opens and controls the contract with the RESP promoter. The beneficiary is the student who can receive education payments when the school and program qualify. In a self-opened adult RESP, those two roles can be the same person.

The main caution is grant planning. Most older adult learners should not expect new Canada Education Savings Grant money on fresh contributions, because CESG is tied to child and youth age rules. The important adult-adjacent opportunity is the Canada Learning Bond for eligible youth aged 18 to 20, born in 2004 or later, who request it before age 21 if it has not already been paid into an RESP for them.

Adult RESP planning therefore starts with a decision test: are you trying to claim unpaid CLB before the deadline, use an existing family RESP for school, earmark money for a qualifying program, or simply save flexibly for a possible future course?

If the answer is a firm qualifying education plan, an RESP can still be useful. If school is uncertain, the program may not qualify, the date is very soon, or the adult needs money for non-education emergencies, a TFSA or ordinary savings account may be simpler.

Before opening or relying on an adult RESP, confirm the provider supports the benefit or withdrawal you need, the school and program qualify, and the adult student understands the tax slip and recordkeeping side of Educational Assistance Payments.

Adult RESP decision test

Start by naming the scenario. A 19-year-old trying to claim unpaid Canada Learning Bond has a different decision than a 32-year-old saving for a professional certificate or a parent trying to use an old family RESP for an adult child.

If the adult is 18 to 20, born in 2004 or later, and may have unpaid CLB, speed matters because the request window closes the day before age 21. If the adult is older, the main question is whether the RESP rules add enough value compared with a TFSA or plain savings.

If money is already inside a family RESP, the first question is not whether to open a new account. It is how much is contributions, grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and earnings, and whether the adult beneficiary can receive EAPs for the actual program.

Who can open and control the plan

Canada.ca's opening guidance allows an adult to open an RESP for themselves or another eligible adult. The promoter still needs the required Social Insurance Number details, identity information, residency information, and plan setup forms before the account can be registered.

In a self-opened adult RESP, the same person can be both subscriber and beneficiary. That can simplify control because the person choosing the provider, contribution amount, and investment approach is also the future student.

Another person can also be subscriber for an adult beneficiary when the plan terms allow it. In that case, the subscriber still controls many account instructions, so the adult student should understand who can request withdrawals, transfer the account, or close the plan.

18-to-20 CLB action plan

The Canada Learning Bond is the most important adult-adjacent RESP rule. ESDC says eligible youth born on or after January 1, 2004 can apply from age 18 until the day before they turn 21 if the CLB has not already been paid into an RESP for them.

No personal contribution is needed to receive CLB, but an RESP is needed. The practical move is to find a promoter that offers CLB, open the RESP with the required SIN and identity information, and specifically request the unpaid CLB.

Do not wait until a school admission letter arrives if the birthday deadline is close. The CLB can be requested before the education withdrawal stage, and the adult can later use the RESP for qualifying full-time or part-time post-secondary costs.

Grant expectations for older adults

Most internet RESP grant advice is written for parents trying to maximize CESG for children. Older adult learners should be careful with that advice. CESG has child and youth age rules, including special contribution-history tests for ages 16 and 17.

A 25-year-old, 35-year-old, or 50-year-old returning to school should generally not plan around new CESG on fresh contributions. The RESP may still hold existing grants or earnings from an older plan, but new adult saving usually does not create a new CESG opportunity.

The $50,000 lifetime contribution limit still matters per beneficiary across all RESPs. Before adding money for an adult, ask whether any parent, grandparent, or earlier account already used contribution room.

Check the school and program before locking in

Adult status alone does not make a withdrawal qualify. The student must be enrolled in a qualifying or specified post-secondary program, and the promoter must accept the school and program documentation before paying EAP money.

Canada.ca examples include universities, colleges, CEGEPs, trade schools, apprenticeship programs, and some foreign institutions. The program also needs to meet minimum study duration and study-load rules, which differ for full-time, part-time, and foreign study.

A school appearing on a designated-institution list is a useful starting point, not a blank cheque. The provider still checks the actual program, dates, study load, proof of enrolment, and plan terms.

RESP versus TFSA for adult learners

A TFSA and an RESP solve different problems. CRA describes a TFSA as a registered savings account that can hold cash and investments and generally allows tax-free withdrawals for any purpose. An RESP is tied to education rules and separates contribution withdrawals from EAPs.

For an adult who is unlikely to receive new RESP benefits, the comparison often comes down to purpose and friction. The RESP can enforce an education-only plan and preserve existing RESP benefits, while the TFSA can be easier if the adult may need money for housing, work gaps, debt, or a program that does not qualify.

The RESP becomes more compelling when unpaid CLB is available, an old RESP already exists, or the learner is confident about a qualifying program. The TFSA becomes more compelling when flexibility, emergency access, and avoiding provider withdrawal paperwork matter more.

Withdrawal timing, tax slips, and records

Once the adult beneficiary is enrolled in a qualifying program, RESP money can help pay education costs such as tuition, books, tools, transportation, and rent. The subscriber asks the promoter for the withdrawal and provides proof of enrolment.

Withdrawals are not all the same. Subscriber contributions are generally different from Educational Assistance Payments. EAPs usually include grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and accumulated income, and CRA says they are taxable to the student beneficiary.

CRA says EAPs are reported to the student on a T4A slip in box 042. Adult students should keep the withdrawal confirmation, EAP-versus-contribution split, T4A slip, proof of enrolment, and school-cost records with their tax and student-aid files.

Timing can also matter. EAPs have first-13-week limits for full-time and part-time study, and Canada.ca describes a six-month post-enrolment window when payments may still be possible if the expense would have qualified while the student was enrolled.

Old family RESP with an adult beneficiary

Adult RESP questions often start with money that already exists. A parent or grandparent may have opened an RESP years ago, the beneficiary may now be an adult, and the family may be trying to use the account for college, university, trade school, or a career-change program.

In that case, ask the promoter for the current buckets: personal contributions, CESG, additional CESG, CLB, provincial incentives, and accumulated income. Each bucket can behave differently if the adult attends school, changes programs, transfers the plan, or does not use the RESP.

Plan age and closure rules also matter. RESPs can stay open for many years, but maximum duration rules and provider-specific closure steps can create pressure when a beneficiary returns to school later than expected.

Provider and tool next steps

For a new adult RESP, compare providers on CLB support, account type, fees, investment options, transfer rules, and withdrawal speed. For an old RESP, focus on the existing promoter's withdrawal process, school-document rules, and plan-age deadlines.

The provider profiles linked below are comparison starting points, not endorsements. Use them to see what details to verify with each institution, then check the provider's official RESP pages and the Canada.ca promoter list before opening or transferring an account.

Use the withdrawal tax planner when the adult student is close to school and needs to estimate EAP versus contribution withdrawals. Use the provider checklist when the key issue is whether a promoter supports CLB, provincial incentives, transfers, and the documents needed for adult education withdrawals.

Action checklist

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Details that matter

Adults can open RESPs

Canada.ca says adults can open an RESP for themselves or another eligible adult.

Same person can be subscriber and beneficiary

An adult opening an RESP for themselves can be both the contract owner and the future student beneficiary.

CESG is usually not the adult hook

New CESG is generally tied to child and youth age rules, so older adult learners should not plan around it.

CLB has a youth window

Eligible youth born in 2004 or later can request unpaid CLB from age 18 until the day before age 21.

Contribution limit still applies

The $50,000 lifetime contribution limit applies per beneficiary across all RESPs, including adult-beneficiary situations.

Program rules matter

The school, program length, study load, and proof of enrolment must support RESP withdrawals.

EAP tax goes to the student

EAPs are generally taxable to the beneficiary, which in an adult RESP is the adult student.

T4A records matter

CRA says EAPs are reported to the student on a T4A slip, so adult learners should keep the slip and withdrawal breakdown.

TFSA may be simpler

If no new RESP benefit is available and flexibility is the priority, a TFSA may fit better than a new adult RESP.

Example scenario

Example: A 19-year-old born in 2006 learns they may have been eligible for the Canada Learning Bond but never received it. They ask a CLB-supporting promoter about opening an RESP for themselves and requesting unpaid CLB before their 21st birthday, then later use the RESP for a qualifying college program. A 34-year-old planning a career-change certificate in two years can also open an RESP for themselves, but should compare it with a TFSA because new CESG is generally not available and flexibility may matter more. A 27-year-old with an old family RESP should first ask the promoter for the contribution, grant, CLB, provincial incentive, and earnings split before requesting school withdrawals.

Questions to ask a provider

01

Can I open this RESP with myself as both subscriber and beneficiary?

02

Do you support Canada Learning Bond requests for eligible 18-to-20-year-old beneficiaries?

03

If I may have unpaid CLB, what exact steps and deadline apply before my 21st birthday?

04

Do you see any existing RESP history or contribution room issue for this beneficiary?

05

Would my planned full-time, part-time, trade, apprenticeship, college, university, or foreign program qualify for RESP withdrawals?

06

What proof of enrolment do you need, and how long do withdrawals usually take after I submit it?

07

How do you split and report contribution withdrawals versus EAPs?

08

Can you show me the current contribution, CESG, CLB, provincial incentive, and earnings balances separately?

09

Who can receive the withdrawal payment, and who receives the T4A slip?

10

What first-13-week EAP limits would apply to my full-time or part-time program?

11

When must this RESP close, and what happens if I delay school, change programs, transfer providers, or do not attend?

Open the worksheet RESP Withdrawal and Tax Planner

Plan contribution withdrawals and EAPs with first-13-week limits, estimated student tax, and funding gaps.

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

Can adults open an RESP?

Yes. Adults can open an RESP for themselves or another eligible adult. The provider still has to confirm SIN, residency, plan type, and beneficiary details.

Read the full answer

Can I open an RESP for myself?

Yes. In a self-opened adult RESP, you can be both the subscriber and the beneficiary, but you should check whether an RESP is better than a TFSA or savings account for your timeline.

Read the full answer

Can adults get RESP grants?

Most adult learners should not expect new CESG. The narrow exception to check is unpaid Canada Learning Bond for eligible youth aged 18 to 20, born in 2004 or later, before age 21.

Read the full answer

Can youth aged 18 to 20 claim the Canada Learning Bond themselves?

Yes, if they meet the CLB rules and the CLB has not already been paid into an RESP for them. They need a CLB-supporting promoter and must apply before the day they turn 21.

Read the full answer

Can an RESP pay for adult education?

Yes, if the adult beneficiary is enrolled in a qualifying post-secondary program and the provider accepts the school and program documentation.

Read the full answer

Can an RESP pay for part-time adult school?

Possibly. Part-time adult study can qualify when the program meets the RESP rules, but EAP limits, study-load proof, and provider documentation should be confirmed first.

Read the full answer

Is an RESP or TFSA better for adult education savings?

It depends on the reason for saving. An RESP may fit a qualifying education plan, unpaid CLB, or an existing RESP. A TFSA is often simpler when flexibility matters and new RESP grants are unlikely.

Read the full answer

Official sources