RESP assets
Total RESP market value at the end of 2024, including contributions, benefits, investment returns, withdrawals, and benefit repayments.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewContributed in 2024
Annual RESP contributions in 2024 constant dollars.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewParents saving
Share of Canadian parents and guardians of children under 18 who were saving for postsecondary education in 2025.
Statistics Canada SAEP 2025What the stats say
- RESPs are large enough to matter nationally: assets reached $89.8 billion at the end of 2024.
- The basic grant is widely used, but the CESG take-up rate still sat at 53.4% among eligible children aged 0 to 17.
- The Canada Learning Bond has a larger access gap: cumulative take-up was 43.4%, and new take-up was 18.9% in the 2023-2024 benefit year.
- RESP withdrawals are already a major postsecondary funding stream, with $6.7 billion withdrawn by 583,079 beneficiaries in 2024.
- The biggest planning divide is not just awareness. Statistics Canada data shows household income and day-to-day expenses strongly shape whether families can save.
Investing context
Common RESP investment strategies and what the public data can show
RESPs are accounts, not investments. The strategy depends on the promoter, the product menu, the fees, the child's age, and when withdrawals may begin.
The federal CESP review publishes RESP assets, contributions, benefits, withdrawals, take-up rates, and promoter-type shares. It does not publish average account returns by provider, investment product, or portfolio strategy. The year-by-year table below is therefore the closest public program-level proxy: total RESP market value change, which includes contributions, grants, investment returns, withdrawals, and repayments.
Strategy map
Most common RESP investment approaches to compare
This table is a quick decision aid. It does not rank products or providers; it shows where each approach tends to fit and what to ask before choosing.
| Approach | Best fit | Typical holdings | Main strength | Watch for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash, high-interest savings, or GIC ladder | Withdrawals expected soon, usually within 0 to 3 years. | High-interest savings, term deposits, short GICs, or money-market style holdings. | Protects tuition money from a badly timed market drop. | Lower long-term growth, inflation risk, deposit-insurance limits, and early-cashout rules. |
| Diversified ETF or index portfolio | Families comfortable with self-directed or robo-advised investing and a multi-year horizon. | Broad equity and bond ETFs, often rebalanced annually or through an all-in-one portfolio. | Low-cost diversification and easy glide-path adjustments as school approaches. | Market volatility, trading/transfer fees, and whether the provider supports all desired grants. |
| Advisor-managed mutual fund or model portfolio | Families who want help with paperwork, risk questions, and ongoing review. | Mutual funds, managed portfolios, or provider-built portfolios. | Guidance can help families stay organized and avoid missed benefit applications. | MERs, advice fees, embedded compensation, and whether performance justifies the cost. |
| Age-based glide path | Subscribers who want a simple rule for reducing risk as the first school year gets closer. | More growth assets when the child is young, then more bonds, cash, or GICs near withdrawal years. | Matches investment risk to the date the money is likely needed. | Some accounts do not adjust automatically. Put review dates on the calendar. |
| Group or scholarship plan | Families who understand the contract and are comfortable with scheduled contributions and plan rules. | Pooled plan structure managed by the scholarship plan dealer. | Built-in contribution discipline and plan administration. | Sales charges, cancellation rules, forfeited earnings, missed-contribution rules, and EAP restrictions. |
| Concentrated stocks or sector bets | Only a small optional slice for experienced investors, not core tuition money. | Individual stocks, narrow sector funds, or speculative positions. | High upside if the bet works. | High loss risk and poor fit for money needed on a fixed school timeline. |
Average gains reality check
Closest public proxy: total RESP assets by year
These are not average account gains. They are national RESP asset changes from the CESP review, useful for seeing broad program movement but not for judging a family's portfolio performance.
| Year | Total RESP assets | Change from prior year | Visual read |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | $47.0B | Baseline | |
| 2016 | $51.3B | +9.1% | |
| 2017 | $55.9B | +9.0% | |
| 2018 | $56.1B | +0.4% | |
| 2019 | $63.7B | +13.5% | |
| 2020 | $69.9B | +9.7% | |
| 2021 | $78.0B | +11.6% | |
| 2022 | $73.0B | -6.4% | |
| 2023 | $78.9B | +8.1% | |
| 2024 | $89.8B | +13.8% |
Source: CESP Table 4. Total market value includes contributions, grants, investment returns, withdrawals, and benefit repayments, so it should not be read as an investor return.
Best fit
Best RESP strategy usually means best matched to the withdrawal date
The strongest long-term setup is normally low cost, diversified, grant-aware, and less risky as the first school year gets closer.
About 13+ years to school
Capture eligible CESG or CLB, keep fees low, and review annually rather than reacting to every market move.
About 8 to 12 years
Keep broad diversification, start documenting grant room, and confirm the provider supports needed provincial benefits.
About 4 to 7 years
Gradually reduce equity risk and begin planning which dollars may be needed for the first year of school.
About 1 to 3 years
Protect near-term EAP and contribution withdrawals with cash, short GICs, or lower-risk holdings.
Withdrawals underway
Coordinate proof of enrolment, EAP tax timing, and remaining invested money so the next withdrawal is not forced during volatility.
The best RESP strategy starts with the first likely withdrawal date, then reduces risk as that date approaches.
OSC Investor Office time-horizon guidanceBefore chasing investment returns, confirm the promoter supports CESG, CLB, and any provincial incentives the beneficiary may qualify for.
Canada.ca opening an RESPCompare MERs, advice fees, trading costs, transfer fees, cancellation rules, and whether the plan can adapt if school plans change.
OSC RESP provider questionsA plan can hold many qualified investment types, but the specific promoter decides what menu is available in that account.
CRA qualified investments folioQuick comparison
Canada's RESP compared with other countries
These are not perfect equivalents. The table shows the closest official child or education savings structures and the practical difference a Canadian family would notice first.
| Country and plan | Public top-up | Tax treatment | Control and use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada RESP Canada.ca RESP rules | Strong direct education-savings top-up: CESG, CLB, plus provincial incentives in B.C. and Quebec. | Growth is tax-sheltered while inside the RESP. Educational assistance payments are taxable to the student. | Subscriber opens and controls the plan; funds are tied to eligible postsecondary education. |
| United States 529 plan Investor.gov 529 bulletin | No Canada-style federal matching grant. State tax benefits or matching grants may apply depending on the state plan. | Earnings are generally not subject to federal income tax when withdrawals pay qualified education expenses. | Account holder owns the plan; state plans set fees, investment menus, and some residency rules. |
| United Kingdom Junior ISA GOV.UK Junior ISA | Tax-free child savings wrapper, but no current government match like CESG. 2026-2027 contributions are capped at GBP9,000. | Money grows tax-free inside the Junior ISA. | The money belongs to the child and usually cannot be withdrawn until age 18. |
| Singapore Child Development Account LifeSG Baby Bonus Scheme | Government co-savings model: First Step Grant plus dollar-for-dollar matching up to a cap based on birth order. | A special child account for approved child-related expenses, not a broad postsecondary investment account. | CDA trustee manages use for approved expenses such as childcare, kindergarten, healthcare, and related services. |
Provincial differences
Where provincial RESP incentives change the math
Federal CESG and CLB rules matter everywhere, but B.C. and Quebec currently add separate provincial benefits. Saskatchewan is worth showing because its former grant is suspended, which can still confuse families.
All provinces and territories
CESG up to $7,200 lifetime; CLB up to $2,000 lifetime for eligible children.
Available nationally through participating RESP promoters. CLB does not require personal contributions.
Canada.ca education savings benefitsBritish Columbia
$1,200 one-time grant.
Apply between the child's 6th birthday and the day before age 9. No matching contribution is required.
Province of B.C.Quebec
10% of annual net RESP contributions, up to $250; possible extra amount up to $50; lifetime maximum $3,600.
Provider/trustee applies for the tax credit. Payment is generally annual rather than monthly.
Revenu QuebecSaskatchewan
Previously 10% up to $250 per year.
Grant payments are suspended as of January 1, 2018; no unused grant room accumulates during the suspension period.
SAGES ActOther provinces and territories
CESG and CLB may still apply.
CRA's current provincial program list names Quebec QESI and B.C. BCTESG.
CRA provincial programsProvince table
2024 RESP participation by province and territory
Use this table to spot where families contribute more on average, where CESG participation is stronger, and where the Canada Learning Bond access gap is still widest.
| Province or territory | Average RESP contribution | CESG take-up | CLB take-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Newfoundland and Labrador | $1,449 | ||
| Prince Edward Island | $1,579 | ||
| Nova Scotia | $1,596 | ||
| New Brunswick | $1,456 | ||
| Quebec Active QESI | $1,700 | ||
| Ontario | $1,928 | ||
| Manitoba | $1,480 | ||
| Saskatchewan SAGES suspended | $1,661 | ||
| Alberta | $1,702 | ||
| British Columbia Active BCTESG | $1,964 | ||
| Yukon | $1,993 | ||
| Northwest Territories | $1,872 | ||
| Nunavut | $2,259 | ||
| Canada National | $1,804 |
Average contribution, CESG take-up, and CLB take-up are from the 2024 Canada Education Savings Program Annual Statistical Review.
Evolution
How RESPs changed over time
The RESP story is not just account rules. It moved from a tax-sheltered savings contract to a grant, bond, and provincial-incentive system with a large national funding footprint.
-
RESP structure begins
RESPs are introduced as contracts between subscribers and promoters to save for postsecondary education.
ESDC formative evaluation -
CESG changes the incentive
The Canada Education Savings Grant is established, adding a federal match to eligible RESP contributions.
ESDC formative evaluation -
CLB and Additional CESG arrive
The Canada Learning Bond and Additional CESG are created to improve access for lower- and middle-income families.
Canada Learning Bond announcement -
Higher contribution room
The lifetime RESP contribution limit reaches $50,000, and the annual contribution limit is removed.
ESDC summative evaluation -
RESPs reach national scale
RESP assets reach $89.8 billion, with $6.7 billion withdrawn for postsecondary education during the year.
2024 CESP Annual Statistical Review -
Automatic CLB enrolment planned
Canada plans automatic RESP opening for eligible children born in 2024 or later who are not already named in an RESP by age 4.
Canada Learning Bond automatic enrolment
A small tax-sheltered account system became a major national education-savings pool.
Grant use expanded sharply, but nearly half of eligible children still have not received CESG.
The low-income access tool has grown, yet new CLB take-up remains below one in five newly eligible children.
More students are drawing from RESPs as part of their postsecondary funding mix.
Statistics
RESP program scale
These numbers show that RESPs are a large national savings channel, not a niche product.
Assets at year-end
Total RESP assets rose from $78.9 billion in 2023 to $89.8 billion in 2024.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewAnnual contributions
Families contributed $6.2 billion to RESPs in 2024, measured in 2024 constant dollars.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewAverage contribution
Average annual contribution per CESG beneficiary in 2024 constant dollars.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewStatistics
Government benefits
CESG and CLB data show both strong usage and a remaining access gap, especially for families eligible for the Canada Learning Bond.
CESG paid in 2024
Gross Canada Education Savings Grant payments made during the year.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewCESG beneficiaries
Number of beneficiaries who received the Canada Education Savings Grant during the year.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewCESG take-up
Cumulative CESG beneficiaries aged 0 to 17 divided by eligible children aged 0 to 17.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewCLB take-up
Cumulative Canada Learning Bond take-up among eligible children as of the end of 2024.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewCLB beneficiaries
Cumulative number of beneficiaries who have ever received the Canada Learning Bond.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewNew CLB take-up
Share of children newly eligible for the CLB who received a CLB payment in that benefit year.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewStatistics
Withdrawals for school
Withdrawal data matters because it shows how RESP money actually reaches students once postsecondary education begins.
Withdrawn in 2024
Total RESP withdrawals for postsecondary education in 2024 constant dollars.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewStudents using RESPs
Number of beneficiaries making RESP withdrawals during the year.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewAverage withdrawal
Average RESP withdrawal per beneficiary in 2024 constant dollars.
Canada.ca 2024 CESP Annual Statistical ReviewStatistics
Family saving behaviour
Statistics Canada's 2025 survey adds household context: who is saving, how they save, and why some families delay.
Savers using RESPs
Among children under 18 with postsecondary education savings, about 89% had an RESP in 2025.
Statistics Canada SAEP 2025Income gap
Children in the lowest-income families were much less likely to have education savings than children in the highest-income families.
Statistics Canada SAEP 2025Day-to-day costs
Most common reason parents who were not saving gave for not saving: available funds go to day-to-day expenses.
Statistics Canada SAEP 2025How to read these numbers
Program dollar amounts, contribution totals, and withdrawals come from the federal Canada Education Savings Program review. Parent behaviour, income differences, and barriers to saving come from Statistics Canada's 2025 survey. The two sources answer different questions, so this page keeps the source and data year beside each statistic.
See all RESP sources