Yes. An adult can open an RESP for themselves, which means they can be both the subscriber who controls the plan and the beneficiary who may use education payments later.
That setup can be simple administratively, but it does not turn adult saving into the same grant strategy parents use for young children. The lifetime RESP contribution limit still applies per beneficiary, and new CESG is generally not the adult planning hook.
Before opening one, compare the RESP with a TFSA or ordinary savings account based on school timeline, flexibility, fees, and whether the planned program is likely to qualify.
How to check this rule
- Name yourself as subscriber and beneficiary if the promoter supports that setup.
- Confirm whether any past RESP exists for you and how much lifetime contribution room remains.
- Ask whether your planned school and program could support RESP withdrawals.
- Compare RESP fees and withdrawal paperwork with a TFSA or savings account.
- Open and fund the RESP only after the provider explains the withdrawal process.
Details that matter
Same-person setup
The adult can be both the plan subscriber and the beneficiary.
Contribution cap
The $50,000 lifetime contribution limit applies per beneficiary across all RESPs.
No deduction
RESP contributions are not tax-deductible.
Education purpose
EAPs require qualifying post-secondary education and are generally taxable to the beneficiary.
Example
Example: A 26-year-old wants to save for a two-year diploma starting in 2028. A self-opened RESP could earmark money for school, but if the student may use the money for rent before enrolling or may change plans, a TFSA may be easier.
Questions to ask your provider
- Will your system allow me to be both subscriber and beneficiary?
- What is the contribution room available for this beneficiary?
- Would my planned program meet your withdrawal requirements?
- How long do EAP and contribution withdrawals take?
- What tax slip will be issued when I withdraw EAPs?
Read next
RESPs for adults explains the broader decision and links to related tools.
Tool next step
RESP Eligibility Quick Check 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.