Use the checks below to confirm whether the answer fits the family, provider, and school situation.
Prepare documents and questions before requesting RESP withdrawals for school.
Yes, if the adult beneficiary is enrolled in a qualifying post-secondary program and the provider accepts the school and program documentation.
Adult education can include many of the same categories families already associate with RESPs: college, university, CEGEP, trade school, apprenticeship programs, part-time study, and some foreign programs when the rules are met.
The tax result depends on the withdrawal bucket. EAPs include grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and earnings and are generally taxable to the beneficiary. Contribution withdrawals are handled differently.
How to check this rule
Details that matter
Program must qualify
Adult status alone is not enough; the school and program must support RESP withdrawal rules.
EAP taxable
EAPs are generally taxable to the adult student beneficiary.
Contributions separate
Subscriber contributions are not the same as EAP money.
Provider proof
The promoter decides what enrolment documentation it needs before paying.
Example
Example: An adult beneficiary starts a qualifying college diploma. The subscriber asks for a withdrawal split, sends proof of enrolment, receives a confirmation showing EAP and contribution amounts, and keeps the T4A for tax filing.
Questions to ask your provider
Does this school and program qualify for RESP withdrawals?
Can this withdrawal support adult part-time or full-time study?
How much will be EAP versus contributions?
Who receives the payment?
Will the adult student receive a T4A slip?
Read next
RESPs for adults explains the broader decision and links to related tools.
Tool next step
RESP Withdrawal 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.