Reviewed

RESP First for the Free 20% Match

Start with the RESP to get the government's 20% match, then overflow into a TFSA for extra education savings.

General information only — not financial advice for your situation.

This is a learning tool. Always check CRA My Account records and talk to a qualified professional for your own numbers.

Depends on your situation General information, not advice for your situation.

Plain English

The government literally gives you free money when you save for your kid's education through an RESP — 20 cents for every dollar you put in, up to $500 per year per child. No other account does that. Once you've put in enough to max out the free match, any extra money you want to save for education should go into a TFSA. Why not an RRSP? Because when you take RRSP money out to help with tuition, it counts as income and could affect your kid's eligibility for student loans or your own tax bill. TFSA withdrawals are invisible to all of that.

You contribute $2,500/year to your child's RESP. The government adds $500 (20% CESG). That's $3,000 growing tax-sheltered. After maxing the RESP annual CESG, you have an extra $5,000 to save. Putting it in a TFSA means you can withdraw it later to help with tuition without adding to your taxable income or affecting your child's student aid applications.

Show the analysis

The RESP benefits from the 20% CESG match on the first $2,500 of annual contributions per beneficiary (max $500/year CESG, $7,200 lifetime CESG per child). This guaranteed 20% return is unmatched by any registered account's tax mechanics. For overflow capital, TFSA deployment is superior to RRSP because: (1) TFSA withdrawals are excluded from the parent's net income calculation, preserving CCB and other income-tested benefits, and (2) TFSA withdrawals are invisible to provincial student financial aid means-testing, unlike RRSP/RRIF withdrawals which are classified as taxable income.

RESP: $2,500 contribution + $500 CESG = $3,000 per year. At 7% growth over 18 years: ~$101,000. CESG alone contributes ~$16,800 in free grants over the lifetime. TFSA overflow: $5,000/year at 7% for 18 years = ~$186,000. Withdrawn tax-free, invisible to student aid testing. RRSP alternative: same growth but withdrawal adds to taxable income at 29.65%+ marginal rate.

Edge cases

  • Additional CESG (an extra 10–20%) is available for lower-income families — check eligibility based on family net income.
  • If the child doesn't pursue post-secondary education, the CESG must be returned, but the growth can roll into the contributor's RRSP (up to available room).

About this site

Every number on this site is sourced from CRA publications, the Income Tax Act, or provincial fiscal releases. We show the math, cite the sources, and never tell you what to do with your money.

Sources & references