As flexible as the RESP may be, the lifetime limit of $50,000 per child may not be enough to save for the full tuition, especially if your child chooses to study abroad, say, at an Ivy League school. If you contribute more than the $50,000 limit, you’ll have to pay a penalty worth 1% of the excess contribution per month. However, there is no limit to what the investments in the account can grow to, so you could end up with a lot more than $50,000 by the time you withdraw. If you think your child is headed for grad school or an expensive university abroad, you (and your child, once he or she is 18) might also consider using other savings vehicles, such as TFSAs, in addition to the RESP to help pay for schooling.
Receiving CESG payments is easy. Whoever you set up your account with, whether it’s an advisor, fund company or bank, will fill out all the paperwork needed to get the grants when you set up the account. Then keep an eye on the account to ensure the CESG is being deposited. It usually takes about a month after the contribution to show up in the account. If the CESG doesn’t appear, contact your financial institution or your advisor.
Since CESG room begins to accumulate at birth, it is possible to carry forward unused grant room to increase the CESG paid in any one year. For example, if a child was born three years ago, there would be $2,000 of grant room ($500 for each of the three previous years, and $500 for the current year). If an RESP contribution is made in the current year, the maximum grant the RESP can receive is $1,000, but that would require a $5,000 contribution. Since CESG room accumulates yearly, you can strategize when and how much to contribute to play “catch up” – keeping in mind the yearly maximum CESG grant payout of $1,000. This is handy especially if you open an account much later. If you open the account when your child is nine, you’ll still have enough time to get all the CESG grants (again by contributing $5,000 per year) through their 17th birthday, to the $7,200 lifetime limit.
Automated monthly contributions offer a smart way to build up sufficient savings over time. That way you won’t forget to contribute – the money can automatically get taken off your pay cheque – and it will ensure you’re putting in enough to maximize government grants. This approach also harnesses the power of dollar-cost averaging, a time-tested investing strategy that spreads out your investment dollars over the course of a year so you don’t end up putting in a lump sum at the peak of the market.
One big difference between education and retirement saving is the time horizon, which is rarely longer than the 17 or 18 years it takes for a newborn to reach college age. That means if you want to grow your funds more aggressively within an RESP, then you’ll likely need to do that early on, as you don’t want to risk having too much money in the typically volatile stock market too close to when you need those funds. By the time your kids are in their teens, you may want to shift your asset mix to a more conservative balance. Some financial institutions offer target-date funds that automatically adjust the allocation for you year after year so you’re not at risk of equity market volatility when it comes time to draw down the account.
Generally, you’ll use your RESP savings on tuition and books, but you are allowed to use the funds on any education-related costs. That can also include rent, meals, a laptop, a phone, bus passes, gas for a car – and the list goes on. You don’t usually have to specify how the money has been used.
Good news: beneficiaries attending approved foreign educational institutions are usually fully eligible for RESP funding. The institutions do have to meet three criteria:
Should the student choose to delay post-secondary studies or take a gap year midstream, you can put any expected withdrawals on hold. As mentioned, the account can be kept open for 36 years after it’s opened. However, if a student enrolls and doesn’t finish the first semester at school, and if a year then passes, he or she can only remove up to $8,000 in educational assistance payments (EAP, which includes the CESG and the growth portion of RESP savings) for the first 13 weeks after going back to school. (Or $2,500, if they’re at a specified educational program.) The student can withdraw more after being in school for 13 consecutive weeks.
When it comes to timing, consider the taxable income of the student. For instance, if he or she had a lucrative summer job or two co-op terms in one calendar year, you might want to defer the withdrawal into a tax year when the student’s income is lower, to minimize taxes owing.
There are four steps to take when withdrawing:
Should your child choose not to go to an accredited post-secondary institution, or if there’s money left over in the account at the end of the program, those funds can typically be used as follows:
If you haven’t used the funds after 36 years, and the RESP needs to be collapsed, the following will happen:
While it may seem as though there’s a lot to consider with an RESP, ultimately, your strategy is straightforward. Open it early, start saving, get those government grants, and then, voila, you’ll have most, if not all of, your children’s post-secondary schooling covered by the time they are ready to attend. You can then use your own savings to take them out for some dinners after they get tired of eating mac and cheese in their dorms or apartments all day.