Plan RESP withdrawals by bucket, timing, tax slip, proof of enrolment, provider process, and what happens if school plans change.
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RESP withdrawals become much easier once the family stops thinking of the account as one pile of money. Canada.ca and CRA guidance separate the account into subscriber contributions, government incentives, and investment income, and each bucket can follow different tax and repayment rules when money comes out.
The first practical decision is classification. A withdrawal of original subscriber contributions is usually called a refund of contributions and is generally not taxable because the money was contributed after tax. An Educational Assistance Payment, or EAP, usually includes grants and accumulated income and is generally taxable to the student beneficiary on a T4A slip.
That distinction drives almost every later question: who should receive the money, what proof of enrolment is required, whether the payment fits an education purpose, and whether any grant repayment risk exists. Families often ask 'Can RESP pay for this?' when the better question is 'Can this expense reasonably be supported by an EAP, or should this be a contribution withdrawal instead?'
EAP rules are broader than many parents expect, but they are not unlimited. Official guidance says RESP money can help a student further qualifying post-secondary education, which can include far more than tuition alone. CRA's bulletin also makes clear that some spending remains unreasonable even if the student is enrolled.
Timing matters too. Canada.ca says promoters may ask for proof of enrolment before releasing education-related money, and the federal withdrawal page sets special EAP limits during the first 13 consecutive weeks of full-time or part-time study. That means a family should plan the first withdrawal before tuition, rent, or equipment deadlines are already urgent.
Provider operations matter more at withdrawal time than many families realize when they first open the RESP. The same promoter decides what forms are required, how quickly money is released, whether payments can be split between subscriber and beneficiary, and how clearly each payment is labelled for tax and aid purposes.
Withdrawal planning is also where unused-money strategy starts to matter. If the beneficiary delays school, attends only briefly, switches programs, or never uses the full RESP, contributions, grants, and accumulated income each follow different closing, transfer, rollover, or repayment paths.
A practical withdrawal plan therefore has to answer four questions before money moves: which bucket is being withdrawn, what school proof supports it, what tax slip or grant repayment follows, and how long the provider needs to process the request.
Start with the three RESP withdrawal buckets
Canada.ca's managing-plan guidance and CRA's payment rules treat RESP money differently depending on where it came from. Subscriber contributions can usually be taken back by the subscriber. EAPs contain grant money and earnings intended to support the beneficiary's education. Other plan-closing amounts, such as accumulated income payments, follow a stricter set of rules and are not ordinary school withdrawals.
Families run into trouble when they ask the promoter for 'a withdrawal' without specifying the bucket. The provider may ask whether the request should come from contributions, EAP, or a mix. That is not just paperwork. The answer affects tax slips, grant consequences, cash-flow timing, and how the student later reports income for tax or aid purposes.
- Refund of contributions usually returns the subscriber's after-tax money and is generally not taxable.
- EAPs generally include grants and accumulated income and are normally taxable to the student beneficiary.
- A plan can hold enough money for school while still requiring different withdrawal instructions for each bucket.
What an EAP can reasonably pay for once the student is enrolled
Canada.ca says EAPs can help with qualifying post-secondary education costs, and CRA's bulletin interprets that purpose broadly. Reasonable expenses can include tuition, compulsory fees, books, course materials, tools, moving costs, rent, utilities, food, phone, internet, and local transportation when those costs support the student's studies.
The rule is not that every receipt must name the school. The practical test is whether the expense reasonably helps the beneficiary pursue the qualifying program. That is why rent near campus, groceries, transit passes, and basic living needs can fit even though they are not billed by the college or university.
Some larger purchases need more care. CRA's bulletin says a car may be reasonable in narrower cases, such as when it is in the beneficiary's name and used for transport to school and school-related activities. Families should expect more provider questions when the expense looks less obviously school-linked.
- Reasonable EAP costs usually extend beyond tuition and books.
- Living costs can qualify when they support attendance in a qualifying post-secondary program.
- Higher-dollar or less obvious expenses may need better documentation or a clearer explanation.
What RESP money should not be expected to cover as an EAP
RESP money is not a general family spending account just because a child eventually plans to study. Before the beneficiary is enrolled in a qualifying post-secondary program, ordinary child expenses such as camps, sports, tutoring, entertainment, vacations, elementary or high school costs, and routine family spending should not be framed as EAP expenses.
CRA's bulletin is especially useful on expenses that sound educational but still fail the reasonableness test. It specifically describes property down payments as unreasonable EAP expenses. That means a student who needs housing support may be able to use EAP money for rent and utilities, but not for buying a home.
This is why many families should keep two separate conversations going with the promoter: what the student needs for school, and whether some spending would be cleaner as a refund of contributions rather than as an EAP request.
- Pre-enrolment family and child expenses should not usually be treated as EAP costs.
- A student home purchase is not treated the same way as student rent.
- If the expense does not fit the EAP purpose, ask whether a contribution withdrawal is the safer route.
The first 13 weeks rule can change the first semester plan
Canada.ca's withdrawal page says EAP limits can apply during the first 13 consecutive weeks of a qualifying educational program. That catches families who expect to pull a large first-semester amount immediately for tuition, housing deposits, and setup costs.
The exact allowable amount can change over time, and providers may interpret documentation steps differently, so the high-value move is operational: ask the promoter what first-term EAP limit applies today, how they verify the program start date, and whether part of the need should instead be covered by contribution withdrawals at the beginning.
The limit is not a reason to panic. It is a reason to split the withdrawal plan early. Many families can use a mix of contribution withdrawals first, then larger EAP amounts once the initial-study-period restriction no longer applies.
- Do not assume the full school-year amount can be paid as an EAP on day one.
- Ask for the current first-13-weeks EAP rule before the first semester starts.
- A mixed withdrawal strategy can prevent timing problems around tuition and move-in costs.
Build the first school-year withdrawal calendar before tuition is due
A strong withdrawal plan works backwards from school deadlines. The student may have a tuition deadline, residence deposit, lease start, textbook purchases, moving costs, equipment costs, and student-aid reporting dates before the family has finished the RESP paperwork.
The safest workflow is to request proof of enrolment as soon as the school can provide it, ask the promoter how long its review normally takes, and decide which early costs need contribution money versus EAP money. That reduces the risk of selling investments, waiting for forms, or finding out too late that the provider needs a different document.
Families using self-directed RESPs should also consider settlement and market timing. If investments must be sold before cash can be withdrawn, the RESP should not stay fully invested in volatile assets right up to a fixed tuition or residence deadline.
- List tuition, residence, rent, books, equipment, travel, and living-cost dates before requesting the withdrawal.
- Ask whether the provider needs original forms, e-signatures, uploaded documents, or mailed tax forms.
- If investments must be sold, leave time for trade settlement, currency conversion, and cash availability.
The six-month post-enrolment window can help, but it is narrow
CRA and Canada.ca guidance allow a limited EAP window after enrolment ends. An EAP can be paid for up to six months after the student stops being enrolled only if the payment would have qualified immediately before enrolment ended and the RESP terms allow it.
This can matter when final bills arrive after the last class date, when rent or moving costs trail the study period, or when the family did not submit RESP paperwork before the term ended. It is not a general permission to use EAP money long after school is over.
The family should write down the date the student stopped being enrolled and ask the promoter what it treats as the deadline. If the six-month window is missed, the next options may be contribution refunds, a new enrolment period, a beneficiary change, a transfer, an accumulated income payment, or plan closure.
- The EAP must have qualified immediately before enrolment ended.
- The plan terms must allow the post-enrolment payment.
- Requests should be submitted well before the six-month mark because provider processing can take time.
Who gets paid and who gets taxed are separate questions
Families often assume payment destination controls tax treatment. It does not work that simply. CRA payment guidance focuses on the type of RESP payment. EAPs are generally taxable to the beneficiary, while contribution withdrawals are generally not taxable because they return after-tax money.
The provider may allow funds to be paid to the student, the subscriber, or sometimes directly toward school-related costs depending on the plan's process. Families should not rely on assumptions about who receives the bank transfer. They should ask how the promoter will classify the payment internally and who receives the T4A slip.
This distinction also matters when the student is applying for aid, filing taxes, or explaining cash flow to another family member. A labelled confirmation from the provider is more useful than a bank statement that only shows money arriving.
- Tax treatment follows the payment type more than the bank account that receives the funds.
- Students usually need the EAP breakdown later for tax and student-aid questions.
- Written withdrawal confirmations reduce confusion after several payments across one school year.
Tax slips and student-aid records should be planned together
An EAP is usually reported to the student beneficiary on a T4A slip. That taxable income can be low-impact for many students, but it still has to be reported correctly and may interact with the student's tax return, credits, benefits, or student-aid application questions.
Contribution withdrawals are usually not taxable, but they can still affect grants if taken at the wrong time. That is why the student and subscriber should keep the provider's withdrawal confirmation, not just a bank deposit record.
The useful record is a simple table: withdrawal date, amount, EAP portion, contribution portion, payment recipient, school term, proof of enrolment used, receipt folder location, and whether a T4A is expected.
- Ask whether the student will receive a T4A and in which calendar year.
- Keep the EAP and contribution breakdown with tax and student-aid records.
- If the student applies for aid, answer the current application exactly instead of assuming all RESP withdrawals are treated the same way.
If the student does not use all the RESP, the unused money is not one problem
Canada.ca and CRA both separate the endgame options. Subscriber contributions can often be withdrawn. Unused grants may have to be repaid to the government. Accumulated income may face accumulated income payment rules or in some cases an RRSP rollover path if the legal conditions are met.
That means families should not wait until graduation or dropout to ask what happens next. The right strategy can differ if the student takes a gap, leaves after one term, changes programs, shares a family RESP with siblings, or never attends qualifying school at all.
A strong provider conversation covers these end states before the RESP is emptied. The family should know which dollars remain, what order the provider suggests reviewing them in, and whether a transfer, beneficiary change, or rollover option should be considered before closing the plan.
- Unused grants, contributions, and earnings each have different rules at the end of the plan.
- A beneficiary change or transfer may be better than rushing to close the account.
- Ask about closure, grant repayment, and RRSP rollover rules before the last withdrawal.
Provider profiles are withdrawal-planning evidence, not recommendations
Provider choice becomes painfully visible at withdrawal time. A provider may have low investment costs but slower RESP paperwork, or a clear withdrawal form but less flexible transfer support. The point is not to rank providers by taste. It is to compare the exact withdrawal workflow the family will need.
For each provider, compare the same fields: proof of enrolment rules, acceptable payment recipients, processing time, first-13-week limit wording, large-EAP receipt threshold, transfer-out fee, AIP process, and whether the provider publishes separate forms for EAP, contribution, and AIP withdrawals.
RESP Guide Canada provider profiles are designed for that evidence check. Use them to prepare questions, then confirm current details directly with the promoter before requesting money.
- Do not wait until August to learn a provider's RESP withdrawal process.
- A fast EFT withdrawal in another account type does not prove RESP withdrawals are equally fast.
- Treat unresolved provider-profile questions as prompts for the provider, not as recommendations.
Action checklist
Details that matter
Contribution withdrawals
Refunds of contributions are generally not taxable because they return the subscriber's after-tax deposits rather than grants or growth.
EAP taxation
Educational Assistance Payments usually include grants and accumulated income and are generally taxed to the student beneficiary, normally through a T4A slip.
First-term limits
The RESP withdrawal rules include special EAP limits during the first 13 consecutive weeks of study, so first-semester planning should be confirmed with the provider.
Six-month window
An EAP may still be possible for up to six months after enrolment ends if it would have qualified immediately before enrolment ended and the plan permits it.
Reasonable living costs
Official guidance says EAP money can often support rent, utilities, groceries, phone, internet, books, fees, and transportation when those costs help the student attend a qualifying program.
Car expenses
CRA's bulletin describes a car as reasonable only in a narrower school-transport case, so families should expect extra review before using EAP money that way.
Property down payments
Student rent may be reasonable, but CRA specifically lists down payments on property as unreasonable EAP expenses.
Grant repayment risk
Withdrawing the wrong bucket at the wrong time, or closing a plan with unused incentives, can trigger grant repayment or different end-of-plan rules.
Provider processing
Processing time, required documents, investment settlement, and payment routing vary by promoter, which is why withdrawal friction should be checked before school bills are due.
AIP fallback
Leftover growth may be handled through accumulated income payment rules, including possible RRSP transfer paperwork in eligible cases, rather than as a normal student withdrawal.
Example scenario
Example: A student starts a qualifying college program in September and needs tuition, books, rent, groceries, internet, and a transit pass. The family asks the promoter to split the first request between a contribution withdrawal for immediate move-in costs and an EAP for eligible school-period expenses after proof of enrolment is accepted. They keep the provider's breakdown, proof of enrolment, receipts for larger items, and a note that the student may receive a T4A for the EAP portion. That approach respects the first-term EAP rule, supports tax and student-aid records, and avoids trying to treat unrelated family costs or a housing down payment as education expenses.
Questions to ask a provider
What proof of enrolment, start date, and program details do you require for this withdrawal?
Can you separate the payment into contribution withdrawals and EAPs, and show the breakdown in writing?
What current EAP limit applies during the first 13 consecutive weeks of study?
If the student has recently stopped attending, what date controls the six-month post-enrolment EAP window?
Which living costs do you consider reasonable without extra review, and which expenses need receipts or explanation?
If the request includes rent, transportation, tools, or a car, what documentation do you need?
Who can receive each payment, and who will receive any T4A slip?
How long do you normally take after receiving proof of enrolment, and do investments need to be sold before cash is available?
Could this request trigger grant repayment, affect future grant eligibility, or create issues if the student stops attending?
If some money remains unused later, what would be the next-step options for grants, earnings, contributions, AIP, RRSP transfer, beneficiary change, or RESP 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.
Provider profiles to compare
Related guides
Government explainers to check
Related RESP questions
Related questions answered
What is an RESP EAP, and how is it different from withdrawing contributions?
An EAP is an Educational Assistance Payment that usually includes government incentives and investment income and is generally taxable to the student. A contribution withdrawal usually returns the subscriber's original after-tax money and is generally not taxable.
Can RESP money cover rent, groceries, phone, and other daily student costs?
Often yes, once the beneficiary is enrolled in a qualifying post-secondary program. CRA guidance says many reasonable living costs can be supported by an EAP when they help the student pursue that education.
Can RESP money be used for a car?
Sometimes, but it is a narrower case. CRA says a car can be a reasonable EAP expense only in situations such as transport to school and school-related activities, and families should confirm documentation rules with the provider first.
What happens if the student does not use all the RESP?
Unused RESP money must be reviewed by bucket. Contributions can often be withdrawn, grants may need to be repaid, and accumulated income may follow accumulated income payment or rollover rules depending on the facts.
Why can the first semester withdrawal be smaller than expected?
EAP limits can apply during the first 13 consecutive weeks of study, so families may need to combine contribution withdrawals, EAPs, non-RESP cash, or a later EAP once the initial period has passed.
Will the student get a tax slip for RESP withdrawals?
The student generally receives a T4A for the EAP portion because it includes grants and earnings. Contribution withdrawals are different, so families should keep the provider's written breakdown.