Use the checks below to confirm whether the answer fits the family, provider, and school situation.
Compare RESP providers by fees, grants, investment options, transfers, and withdrawals.
Yes, an RESP can often be transferred from one provider to another, but it should be handled as a registered RESP-to-RESP transfer. Do not treat it like a normal withdrawal unless the promoter has explained the grant, tax, and contribution-limit consequences.
CRA says most transfers from one RESP to another have no tax implications when the transferring and receiving plans share a common beneficiary. Certain sibling transfers can also avoid tax implications, but the age, plan type, and incentive rules need to fit.
The practical transfer check is whether the receiving provider can accept the plan, support the benefits the child needs, and receive the right contribution, grant, bond, provincial incentive, and earnings records from the old provider.
How to check this rule
Details that matter
Use transfer paperwork
A proper RESP transfer keeps the account registered and helps preserve the classification of contributions, grants, bonds, incentives, and earnings.
Same beneficiary is simplest
CRA guidance says most same-beneficiary RESP-to-RESP transfers have no tax implications.
Sibling transfers need care
Some sibling transfers can work, but provider confirmation is important because age, plan type, and incentive rules can matter.
Contribution history matters
A transfer that does not meet the rules can create excess-contribution issues because contribution history can be treated as part of the receiving plan.
Example
Example: A family wants to leave a high-fee provider for a lower-cost promoter that supports CLB and future withdrawals better. They confirm the new promoter supports the child's benefits, ask the old promoter for transfer-out fees, then let the new promoter initiate the registered transfer rather than withdrawing the RESP to a bank account.
Questions to ask your provider
Can this plan be transferred to another RESP without closing it first?
Would the transferring and receiving plans have a common beneficiary or another eligible transfer connection?
Which grants, bonds, and provincial incentives will move?
What transfer-out fees, product charges, or group-plan penalties apply?
Will the transfer be cash, in kind, full, or partial?
How will you confirm contribution history and grant balances after the transfer?
Read next
Transfer an RESP to another provider explains the broader decision and links to related tools.
Tool next step
RESP Provider Checklist can help estimate the practical contribution choices before you confirm eligibility with the promoter.
Provider next step
RESP Provider Checklist helps you compare promoters on grant support, fees, and withdrawal process before opening or moving an RESP.