Plain-language summary
- Canada.ca says any adult can open an RESP for a child, for someone else's child, for themselves, or for another eligible adult.
- If an adult opens an RESP for themselves, that adult can be both the subscriber who controls the plan and the beneficiary who may later use the education money.
- The beneficiary can be a child or an adult, but the school and program still have to be eligible before education payments can come out for study costs.
- Youth aged 18 to 20, born in 2004 or later, may be able to request unpaid Canada Learning Bond for themselves until the day before they turn 21 if it has not already been paid to an RESP for them.
- Contributions are not needed to receive the Canada Learning Bond, but contributions are needed to receive CESG.
Action steps
- Decide who will be the subscriber, who will be the beneficiary, and whether those are the same adult.
- Use an individual RESP unless the provider can clearly explain why another plan type fits the adult beneficiary situation.
- If the person is 18 to 20 and born in 2004 or later, ask the promoter specifically about requesting unpaid Canada Learning Bond before the 21st birthday deadline.
- Bring the adult beneficiary's SIN and confirm Canadian residency and identity requirements before trying to open the RESP.
- Confirm the promoter supports CLB requests and adult self-opened RESP setups in the exact account type you want.
- Before contributing, ask what happens if the adult does not enroll, enrolls part time, changes schools, or needs the money before qualifying education starts.
Caveats to watch
- Adult RESP eligibility is not the same as adult grant eligibility. Being allowed to open the account does not mean new CESG will be available.
- The 18-to-20 CLB rule is deadline-sensitive. Waiting until after the day before the 21st birthday can mean missing unpaid CLB that might otherwise have been requested.
- The CLB brochure says eligible youth can receive up to $2,000 total, but the actual amount depends on years of eligibility and whether the bond was already paid into another RESP.
- An adult self-opened RESP can be too restrictive if the learner may need the money for non-school purposes or may start a program that does not qualify.
- Provider support matters. Some promoters may support ordinary child RESPs but still have process limits, forms, or service rules for adult self-opened accounts and CLB requests.
Examples
Example: 19-year-old checks unpaid CLB
A 19-year-old born in 2006 is planning trade school and never had an RESP. They open an RESP with a promoter that supports CLB, request the bond using their SIN, and contribute nothing at first. If they qualify, eligible CLB can be deposited into the RESP and later used for eligible study expenses.
Example: adult learner opens an RESP for themselves
A 28-year-old plans to start a college program in two years. They can ask to open an individual RESP naming themselves as subscriber and beneficiary. The account may help earmark school money, but they should compare it with a TFSA or savings account if flexibility matters more than RESP structure.
What the official rule changes in plain English
- RESPs are not only parent-for-child accounts. Canada.ca now states plainly that adults can open RESPs for themselves or another eligible adult.
- For adult self-opened RESPs, the same person can wear both hats: subscriber and beneficiary.
- The useful government benefit angle is usually CLB for eligible youth aged 18 to 20, not a new grant strategy for older adult learners.
Questions to ask before opening
- Do you allow an adult to be both subscriber and beneficiary on this RESP?
- Do you support Canada Learning Bond requests for eligible youth aged 18 to 20?
- Which documents do you need for the adult beneficiary's SIN, identity, and residency check?
- What happens if the adult beneficiary does not attend an eligible program?
- How will withdrawals be split between contributions, benefits, and earnings when school starts?