Plain-language summary
- CESG carry-forward means unused Canada Education Savings Grant room from earlier years can still be used in a later year if the beneficiary remains eligible.
- The standard Basic CESG match is 20% on up to $2,500 of annual RESP contributions, which usually means up to $500 of Basic CESG for the year.
- With unused CESG room, Canada.ca says a subscriber can contribute more than $2,500 and receive the 20% match on up to $5,000 of contributions in a year.
- That creates a practical catch-up ceiling of up to $1,000 of CESG per calendar year when enough unused room exists.
- Carry-forward does not remove the lifetime CESG maximum of $7,200 per beneficiary.
Action steps
- Ask the RESP promoter how much unused CESG room the beneficiary has before making a catch-up contribution.
- If enough room exists, plan catch-up contributions in calendar-year chunks instead of assuming one large deposit can collect every missed grant at once.
- Use $2,500 as the normal annual contribution target for Basic CESG and $5,000 as the highest contribution amount that can attract Basic CESG in a catch-up year.
- Check the beneficiary's age before contributing. If the child is 16 or 17, confirm the age-16/17 contribution-history rule was met before the end of the year they turned 15.
- If there are multiple RESPs for the same beneficiary, coordinate subscribers so contributions do not accidentally use the yearly CESG room in the wrong account.
- Track lifetime CESG received, because catch-up stops once the beneficiary reaches the $7,200 lifetime grant maximum.
Caveats to watch
- Carry-forward is grant room, not extra RESP contribution room. The lifetime RESP contribution limit still has to be respected separately.
- The government does not pay missed CESG automatically just because earlier years were missed. A current eligible contribution is still needed.
- Unused room can accumulate even before the child is named in an RESP, but the child still has to meet the CESG eligibility rules when the contribution is made.
- A $10,000 contribution in one year does not produce $2,000 of Basic CESG. Canada.ca describes the catch-up match as applying to contributions up to $5,000 per year.
- Additional CESG has its own income-tested limits and is not the same thing as Basic CESG carry-forward.
- If more than one promoter receives contributions for the same beneficiary, Canada.ca says CESG is paid on a first-come, first-served basis subject to annual and lifetime limits.
Examples
Example: one missed year
A family contributed nothing last year and has unused CESG room. This year, they contribute $5,000 for the child. If the normal rules are met and enough room exists, the RESP could receive up to $1,000 of Basic CESG for the year instead of the usual $500.
Example: several missed years
A family starts late and has several years of unused room. A single $15,000 contribution will not collect all missed Basic CESG at once. The catch-up strategy usually has to be spread over multiple calendar years because the annual catch-up grant ceiling is still $1,000.
Example: teenager with unused room
A beneficiary turns 16 this year and appears to have unused CESG room. Before contributing, the subscriber checks whether at least $2,000 had already been contributed and not withdrawn, or whether at least $100 had been contributed and not withdrawn in four earlier years, before the end of the calendar year the child turned 15.
What to remember
- The simplest catch-up number is $5,000: if enough unused room exists, that is the maximum annual contribution amount that can attract Basic CESG.
- The simplest annual grant number is $1,000: that is the maximum Basic CESG catch-up amount Canada.ca describes for one calendar year.
- The simplest lifetime grant number is $7,200: carry-forward cannot push a beneficiary above that total CESG limit.
- The age deadline is not just the 17th birthday. The contribution-history test for ages 16 and 17 must usually be protected by the end of the year the beneficiary turns 15.
Questions to ask your provider
- How much unused Basic CESG room does this beneficiary have right now?
- How much CESG has the beneficiary already received toward the $7,200 lifetime maximum?
- If I contribute $5,000 this calendar year, how much of it do you expect to attract Basic CESG?
- Are there any other RESPs for this beneficiary that could receive the grant first?
- If the beneficiary is 16 or 17, can you confirm the contribution-history rule before I contribute?