Plain-language summary
- Taking out your own RESP contributions is usually tax-free, but tax-free does not mean consequence-free.
- Canada.ca says contribution withdrawals normally require CESG repayment unless the withdrawal is to fix an over-contribution of $4,000 or less, or a beneficiary in the RESP is eligible for an Educational Assistance Payment.
- The technical CESP withdrawal rule says contribution withdrawals are processed at the plan level, not the beneficiary level.
- If assisted contributions are withdrawn before any beneficiary in the RESP is EAP-eligible, the beneficiaries can lose access to additional CESG for the rest of that year and the next 2 calendar years.
Action steps
- Before requesting money, ask the promoter to separate the RESP into contribution money, grants and bonds, and investment growth.
- Confirm whether any beneficiary in the RESP is currently eligible for an EAP before you ask for a contribution withdrawal.
- If the withdrawal is meant to fix an over-contribution, confirm the total excess across all RESPs for that beneficiary and whether it is $4,000 or less at the time of withdrawal.
- Ask the promoter whether any part of the amount being withdrawn is treated as assisted contributions and what grant repayment will follow.
- If the child may still qualify for additional CESG in the next few years, ask whether this withdrawal would trigger the anti-churning rule before authorizing it.
Caveats to watch
- Families often hear that contributions belong to the subscriber and can come out tax-free, then assume there is no downside. The official rule is narrower: grant repayment can still happen even when no income tax is triggered.
- A pending CESG payment can create a trap. The CESP technical page says that if unassisted contributions are withdrawn before a pending grant is paid, that CESG has to be repaid once it arrives because the contribution no longer supports the grant.
- The over-contribution exception is limited. Canada.ca says CESG repayment is avoided only when the withdrawal is to eliminate an over-contribution and the total excess is not more than $4,000 at the time of withdrawal.
- The anti-churning consequence does not remove basic CESG forever, but it can block additional CESG for the rest of the year plus the next 2 calendar years for tainted beneficiaries.
- Provider systems still matter. Even when the government rule allows the withdrawal, the promoter may require forms, wet signatures, or extra review before releasing the money.
Examples
Example: parent wants money back before school starts
A parent contributed to an RESP for several years and now wants to pull out some of that money while the child is still in high school. The withdrawal may still be tax-free to the parent, but if no beneficiary in the RESP is yet eligible for an EAP, the promoter may have to repay CESG tied to the assisted contribution amount.
Example: small over-contribution fix
A family discovers that total RESP contributions for one beneficiary are $50,300 across two plans. If they withdraw the $300 excess while the total over-contribution is still $4,000 or less, the government exception can avoid CESG repayment even though the excess still needed to be corrected quickly.
Example: early withdrawal hurts future low-income grant top-up
A beneficiary may qualify for additional CESG because of family income. If assisted contributions are withdrawn before any beneficiary in the RESP is EAP-eligible, the official technical rule can block additional CESG for that beneficiary for the rest of the year and the next 2 calendar years, even though basic CESG can still continue.
What this means in real life
- The right question is not just whether you can withdraw contributions, but whether this is the right time to do it.
- This rule matters most for families pausing RESP saving, correcting contribution mistakes, separating finances after a family change, or moving money before the child starts school.
- If the child is close to post-secondary studies, it can be safer to plan the withdrawal together with EAP timing instead of treating it as a standalone refund.
What to ask your promoter
- Is any beneficiary in this RESP currently eligible for an EAP?
- How much of the contribution balance is treated as assisted contributions today?
- What CESG or provincial grant repayment will happen if I withdraw this amount now?
- Would this withdrawal trigger the anti-churning rule and affect additional CESG later?
- What form, review time, and proof do you require before processing the request?