The RESP: How Government Grants Boost Education Savings
By Jose Salloum, Financial Security Advisor (Conseiller en sécurité financière) | June 2026
Important Disclosure — Scope of Advice: This article is general financial education about the Registered Education Savings Plan and the related government grants. It is not personalized financial, investment, or tax advice. The grant rates, maximums, and eligibility rules described in general terms here are set by government and change over time — verify all current figures with official sources (Canada.ca and Revenu Québec) and a qualified advisor. Jose Salloum and CWCC are licensed insurance professionals — not CIRO (Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization)-registered investment advisors; investment choices within an RESP, and tax questions, should be reviewed with the appropriate licensed professional.
Key Takeaways
- An RESP is a registered account for a child’s post-secondary education, offering tax-deferred growth and access to government grants that add to what the family contributes.
- The federal CESG adds money to RESP contributions, and Quebec’s IQEE adds a further provincial layer on top — so Quebec families can receive two layers of government support.
- If the child doesn’t pursue post-secondary, there are options — the plan can stay open for years, a sibling may use it, and your own contributions come back to you, though unused grants are returned to the government.
- The RESP, with its government grants, is the dedicated education-savings tool — no insurance product offers those grants, so participating whole life is not a substitute for an RESP.
There are very few places in Canadian personal finance where the government simply adds money to your savings. Most of the time, the best you can hope for is a tax advantage — a deferral, a deduction, a shelter. But when a Canadian family saves for a child’s education through the right account, something unusual happens: the government contributes alongside them, adding grant money directly to what they put in. And for families in Quebec, it happens twice — once from Ottawa, and again from Quebec City. This is the quiet power of the Registered Education Savings Plan, and understanding how it works is one of the most valuable things a parent or grandparent can do. This article explains what an RESP is, how the government grants work, and why, for education savings, it is almost always the first place to look.
What an RESP Actually Is
An RESP is a registered savings account with a specific purpose: helping families set money aside for a child’s post-secondary education. Like other registered accounts, it comes with tax advantages — but it has one feature that sets it apart from almost everything else.
RESP (Registered Education Savings Plan): a registered account designed for education savings. Contributions are not tax-deductible, but investment growth inside the plan is tax-deferred, and the account is eligible for government grants that add to the family’s contributions.
Subscriber and beneficiary: the subscriber is the person who opens and contributes to the RESP (usually a parent or grandparent); the beneficiary is the child whose education the plan is meant to fund.
The structure works like this: the subscriber contributes money to the plan, the government adds grant money on top, and the combined amount is invested and grows on a tax-deferred basis. Later, when the beneficiary enrols in a qualifying post-secondary program, the money comes out to pay for their education. At that point, the growth and grant portions are taxed in the student’s hands — and because most students have little income, that tax is often very low or nothing at all. The contributions themselves, having already been made with after-tax dollars, come back tax-free. It is an elegantly designed system, and the grants are what make it exceptional.
The Government Grants: CESG, the Quebec IQEE, and the Canada Learning Bond
The defining feature of the RESP is that the government contributes to it. There are a few distinct programs, and understanding the layers is the key to grasping the RESP’s value.
The Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG) is the core federal grant, available to families across Canada. When you contribute to an RESP, the federal government adds a grant that matches a percentage of your contribution, up to annual and lifetime maximums set by the program. This is the foundation — the federal match that every eligible Canadian family can access simply by contributing.
The Quebec Education Savings Incentive (IQEE) is a provincial program for residents of Quebec, administered through Revenu Québec. It adds a further provincial grant on top of the federal CESG, providing a second layer of government support that families outside Quebec do not receive. For a Quebec family, this means a single RESP contribution can attract both the federal and the provincial grant.
The Canada Learning Bond (CLB) is a separate federal program for families with lower incomes. It provides grant money to eligible children’s RESPs without requiring the family to contribute their own funds, helping ensure that education savings are within reach regardless of income.
Important Disclosure: The specific match rates, annual and lifetime maximums, income thresholds, and eligibility rules for the CESG, IQEE, and CLB are set by government and change over time. This article describes how these programs work in general terms only and does not state specific amounts. Always confirm the current rates and rules with official government sources (Canada.ca for federal programs and Revenu Québec for the IQEE) and a qualified advisor before making decisions.
How the RESP Works in Practice
In practice, the RESP follows a natural life cycle that spans roughly two decades, from a child’s early years to the end of their studies.
During the saving years, the subscriber makes contributions — regularly or occasionally — and each eligible contribution attracts the government grants. The contributions and grants are invested together, and the growth accumulates without being taxed year to year. Because the grants are tied to contributions, families who contribute steadily over many years can maximize the government support they receive, and the long time horizon allows that combined pool to grow.
When the beneficiary enrols in a qualifying post-secondary program, the money is paid out to fund their education. Withdrawals that come from the growth and grant portions are called Educational Assistance Payments, and they are taxed in the student’s hands — usually at a low rate. The subscriber’s original contributions can be withdrawn separately and returned without tax. This design means that the tax on years of growth is deferred until the money is needed and then taxed at the student’s low rate, which is one of the RESP’s most significant advantages.
The Quebec Dimension: Two Layers of Support
For families in Quebec, the RESP is especially powerful because of the two-layer structure of government support. A Quebec family that contributes to an RESP can attract the federal CESG and, on top of it, the provincial IQEE — two separate grants flowing into the same plan from two levels of government.
This is a meaningful advantage, and it is specific to Quebec residents. The IQEE is administered separately through Revenu Québec and has its own rules, but for an eligible Quebec family, the practical effect is that each contribution can be amplified by both governments. As with the rest of this discussion, the specific amounts are set by the programs and change over time, so a Quebec family should confirm the current details — but the principle is clear: in Quebec, education savings inside an RESP can receive support from both Ottawa and Quebec City, which makes contributing all the more worthwhile.
When Education Doesn’t Happen
A common and reasonable worry is: what if I save in an RESP, and my child doesn’t go to post-secondary? It is an honest concern, and the answer is that the RESP is more flexible than many people assume — though it is not without consequences.
First, an RESP can usually stay open for many years, so there is no need to make a hasty decision if a child takes time before pursuing further education. Second, if there is more than one child, a sibling may be able to become the beneficiary, allowing the savings to support a different child’s education. Third — and this is important — the contributions you made are always your own. They are returned to you regardless of whether the child pursues education.
The government grant money, however, is conditional. If it is not used for education, the unused grants generally must be returned to the government — that money was provided specifically to support education, so it does not stay with the family if education does not happen. The investment growth can typically be withdrawn under specific conditions, potentially subject to tax and an additional charge, or in some cases moved into a registered retirement account if contribution room is available. The exact options depend on the type of plan and the current rules, which is precisely the kind of situation to review with a qualified advisor when it arises.
Where Insurance Fits — and Where It Doesn’t
Because this site discusses participating whole life insurance, honesty requires being clear about something: for education savings, the RESP is the dedicated tool, and an insurance policy is not a replacement for it.
The RESP offers something no insurance product offers: government grant money added directly to your savings. The federal CESG, the Quebec IQEE, and the Canada Learning Bond simply do not have an equivalent in any insurance policy. For the specific goal of saving for a child’s education, that grant money makes the RESP the first place to look — full stop. It would be misleading to suggest that participating whole life insurance is a better or equivalent way to fund education, and this site will not make that claim.
Participating whole life insurance serves a different purpose entirely. It is permanent life insurance protection — its first job is a death benefit — with a cash value component that can play a role in a broader, long-term financial picture. It addresses goals like lifelong protection, estate planning, and a flexible asset on the balance sheet. Those are real goals, but they are not the same as education savings, and the two should not be confused. A well-built family plan might include an RESP for education and life insurance for protection, each doing the job it is designed for — not one substituting for the other.
Important Disclosure: Participating whole life insurance is an insurance product, not an investment, and is not a substitute for an RESP for education savings. The RESP provides government grants that no insurance product offers. Participating whole life insurance provides a death benefit and a cash value; its dividends (participations) are not guaranteed and are declared annually by the insurer’s board of directors. Cash value is not a deposit and is not protected by CDIC; policyholder protection is provided by Assuris, which is not a government body. Whether any insurance product is appropriate for your situation requires personalized analysis with a licensed insurance professional.
The Honest Takeaway
The RESP is one of the genuinely great deals in Canadian personal finance, and the reason is simple: the government adds money to your savings. For families in Quebec, it does so twice. There are very few opportunities like this, and for the goal of funding a child’s education, the RESP is almost always the first place a family should look — well before considering any other vehicle.
The most valuable move is to understand the plan, contribute steadily to capture the grants over time, and let the combination of government support and tax-deferred growth do its work across the years a child grows up. The specific rules and amounts change, so they deserve a check with current government sources — but the principle is durable and worth acting on. Building an education-savings plan that captures these grants, and fitting it alongside the rest of your financial picture, is work well done with a qualified advisor who can see how all the pieces connect.
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Important Disclosure: This article is general financial education about the RESP and government education grants and is not personalized financial, investment, or tax advice. Grant rates and rules are set by government and change — verify current details with Canada.ca, Revenu Québec, and a qualified advisor. Investment decisions require a CIRO-registered advisor and tax matters require a CPA or tax professional. Jose Salloum and CWCC are licensed insurance professionals and are not CIRO-registered. As licensed insurance professionals, Jose Salloum and CWCC may receive commissions on insurance products discussed elsewhere on this site.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an RESP?
A registered account designed to help families save for a child’s post-secondary education, offering tax-deferred growth and access to government grants that add to what the family contributes. Contributions are not tax-deductible, but growth is not taxed inside the plan; when withdrawn for education, the growth and grant portions are taxed in the student’s hands, usually at a low rate.
What is the CESG and how does the Quebec IQEE relate to it?
The Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG) is a federal grant that adds money to RESP contributions, and Quebec’s IQEE is a provincial incentive that adds a further amount on top — so Quebec families can receive two layers of government support in the same plan. The specific rates and maximums are set by government and change, so confirm current details with official sources.
What happens to an RESP if the child doesn’t go to post-secondary?
There are several options: the plan can usually stay open for years, a sibling may be able to become the beneficiary, and your own contributions are returned to you. Unused government grants generally must be returned to the government, and the growth may be withdrawn under specific conditions (potentially with tax and a charge) or moved to a registered retirement account if room exists. Review the specifics with a qualified advisor.
Is participating whole life insurance a replacement for an RESP?
No — the RESP, with its government grants, is the dedicated education-savings vehicle, and no insurance product offers those grants. Participating whole life insurance serves a different purpose — permanent protection with a cash value — and is not a substitute for an RESP for funding education. For education savings, the RESP’s grants make it the first tool to consider.
