Transferring an RESP means moving registered RESP property from one promoter to another. It is not the same as withdrawing the account to your chequing account, closing everything, and opening a new plan later.
Families usually transfer because the current provider has high fees, weak service, limited investments, unsupported CLB or provincial benefits, group-plan restrictions, or slow withdrawal handling. Those are valid reasons to review the account, but the transfer should be handled through the providers so contributions, grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and earnings stay properly classified.
The safest path is to choose the new provider first, confirm that the receiving RESP can accept the transfer, then have the new provider and old provider complete the registered transfer paperwork. That keeps the focus on an RESP-to-RESP transfer rather than an accidental contribution withdrawal or taxable end-of-plan event.
Official CRA guidance says most RESP-to-RESP transfers have no tax implications when the transferring and receiving plans have a common beneficiary, and there are also sibling situations that can qualify. Other transfers can create excess-contribution consequences because contribution history can be carried into the receiving plan.
The practical rule for families is simple: do not move the money manually. Before signing, ask both providers how the transfer will treat personal contributions, CESG, additional CESG, CLB, provincial incentives, earnings, and any existing contribution history.
When moving the RESP can make sense
A transfer is worth considering when the current promoter no longer fits the family. The most common reasons are unsupported benefits, poor service, high ongoing fees, a limited investment menu, hard-to-understand group-plan terms, or a provider that cannot clearly explain future withdrawals.
Benefit support is often the strongest reason. The official RESP promoters list shows that promoters do not all support the same mix of basic CESG, additional CESG, Canada Learning Bond, and provincial incentives. If the child may qualify for CLB, BCTESG, QESI, or another supported benefit, the receiving provider must be checked before the transfer.
Fees matter too, but the decision should not be only about a transfer-out charge. A one-time fee may be worth paying if the new provider gives lower ongoing costs, better grant support, better withdrawal processing, or clearer records for the rest of the child's education timeline.
- Unsupported benefits can be a stronger reason to move than investment preference alone.
- A lower-cost provider is useful only if it can administer the grants and withdrawals the family needs.
- Group-plan contracts, cancellation terms, and transfer restrictions deserve extra review before any move.
Rules to confirm before starting
CRA guidance says most transfers from one RESP to another have no tax implications when the plans share a common beneficiary. Transfers can also avoid tax implications in certain sibling cases, including where the receiving beneficiary is a brother or sister of a transferring-plan beneficiary and the age and plan-type conditions fit.
When those conditions do not fit, the transfer can create excess-contribution problems. CRA explains that contribution history can be assumed by the receiving plan, and subscribers from the transferring plan can be treated as subscribers under the receiving plan for excess-contribution tax purposes.
Education savings incentives add another layer. The Canada Education Savings Program's RESP transfer material says incentive-transfer conditions matter for CESG, CLB, and provincial incentives administered by ESDC. If conditions are not satisfied, the transferring promoter may have to repay incentive balances.
- Same-beneficiary transfers are usually the cleanest case.
- Sibling transfers can work, but age, plan type, and incentive rules need confirmation.
- The receiving promoter should confirm whether grants, bonds, and provincial incentives can transfer before the old account is touched.
What actually moves in a proper transfer
A proper transfer should preserve the identity of the RESP buckets. Personal contributions, CESG, additional CESG, CLB, provincial incentives, and accumulated earnings are not all the same thing, so the providers need to report the transfer with the right account balances and beneficiary information.
That bucket split matters later. The family may need contribution totals for the $50,000 lifetime limit, grant history for CESG room, CLB records for a specific beneficiary, and EAP breakdowns when the student starts school.
If the account is transferred as cash, investments are sold before the move and repurchased or reinvested at the new provider. If the account is transferred in kind, eligible investments may move without being sold. Not every RESP provider can accept every security, fund class, or group-plan position, so the family should confirm cash versus in-kind handling up front.
- A transfer should keep contribution, grant, bond, incentive, and earnings records distinct.
- Cash transfer and in-kind transfer are operational choices, not just wording on a form.
- Unsupported holdings may need to be sold before transfer, which can create market-timing and fee questions.
Step-by-step transfer workflow
Start by choosing the receiving provider as if you were opening the RESP from scratch. Confirm plan type, supported benefits, investment menu, account fees, transfer-in process, withdrawal process, and whether the exact beneficiary setup can be accepted.
Next, ask the current provider for the transfer-out fee, whether any deferred sales charge, group-plan condition, liquidation requirement, or account closure fee applies, and whether partial transfers are permitted under the plan terms.
Then complete the receiving provider's RESP transfer package. In many cases, the new provider initiates the request with the old provider. The family should give accurate subscriber details, beneficiary details, old account numbers, transfer amount instructions, and cash or in-kind instructions.
During the transfer, pause assumptions. Do not withdraw contributions separately unless the provider explains the grant impact. Do not make a large new contribution until the receiving account's contribution history is visible and the lifetime limit has been checked. Keep copies of every form and final statement.
- Pick the receiving provider before starting paperwork with the old provider.
- Let the providers process a registered transfer instead of moving cash through a personal account.
- Wait for final statements and grant balances before making new catch-up or max-out contributions.
Fees, timing, and provider friction
Canada.ca notes that transfers may have fees. The exact amount, timing, reimbursement policy, and required forms are provider-specific, so the family should get the answer in writing from both sides before signing.
Transfer time can vary because several things may have to happen in sequence: opening the receiving RESP, completing transfer forms, selling unsupported holdings if needed, sending funds or assets, reporting notional grant balances, and reconciling government incentive records.
A slow transfer can be especially stressful when the beneficiary is close to starting school. If withdrawals may be needed soon, ask whether the transfer should wait until after a planned EAP, whether contributions should stay temporarily at the old provider, or whether the new provider can process school withdrawals quickly once the transfer lands.
- A transfer-out fee is common enough that it should be part of every provider comparison.
- The fastest path is usually clean paperwork, matching account names, and clear cash or in-kind instructions.
- Do not start a transfer right before tuition is due without asking how withdrawals will be handled during the move.
Special cases that deserve extra care
Family RESPs, sibling transfers, CLB balances, additional CESG, and provincial incentives can all create extra checks. CLB is beneficiary-specific, and provincial incentives may have their own provider and residency rules. Quebec families should confirm QESI support with the receiving provider before moving.
Group RESPs need a careful contract review. A family may be allowed to transfer, but the cost, timing, refund value, or cancellation consequences may be different from a straightforward bank or brokerage RESP.
Multiple existing RESPs for the same child also need coordination. If parents and grandparents have separate plans, a receiving provider should know the full contribution history before anyone makes a new deposit after the transfer.
- CLB and provincial incentives should be confirmed beneficiary by beneficiary.
- Group-plan transfer value may not equal the account value a family expects from a simple bank statement.
- Separate parent and grandparent RESPs can accidentally create contribution-limit problems after a move.
After the transfer is complete
Once the receiving provider confirms the transfer, review the first statement carefully. The plan should show the correct subscriber, beneficiary, contribution history, grant and bond balances, provincial incentive support, and investment allocation.
Then update the family's shared RESP tracker. Record the transfer date, old provider, new provider, final old statement, opening new statement, transfer fee, grant balances, contribution totals, and any investments that were sold or repurchased.
Only after that review should the family resume scheduled contributions, catch-up contributions, or a max-out plan. The transfer is not truly done until the records are clean enough to support future grant claims and school withdrawals.
- Compare old and new statements instead of assuming the transfer landed perfectly.
- Keep transfer forms because they may be useful when grants, withdrawals, or contribution totals are questioned later.
- Restart contributions only after the receiving account's history is visible and reconciled.
Step-by-step path
- Write down why the current RESP should move: fees, unsupported benefits, investments, service, group-plan terms, or withdrawal friction.
- Choose the receiving provider and verify the exact benefits it supports for this beneficiary and province.
- Ask the current provider for transfer-out fees, restrictions, cash versus in-kind options, and any group-plan or product-specific consequences.
- Confirm that the transfer should qualify as an RESP-to-RESP transfer, especially if beneficiaries differ or siblings are involved.
- Have the receiving provider initiate the registered RESP transfer paperwork and avoid withdrawing money to a personal bank account.
- Track whether the transfer is full or partial and whether CLB, CESG, provincial incentives, earnings, and contribution history are being moved correctly.
- After completion, reconcile the old final statement against the new opening statement before making more contributions.
Details that matter
Use a registered transfer
Moving an RESP through provider transfer paperwork is not the same as withdrawing the money and redepositing it.
Same beneficiary is cleanest
CRA says most RESP-to-RESP transfers have no tax implications when the transferring and receiving plans share a beneficiary.
Sibling cases need checks
Sibling transfers can avoid tax implications in some cases, but age, plan type, and incentive-transfer rules still need provider confirmation.
Contribution history follows
If a transfer does not fit the rules, contribution history can create excess-contribution issues in the receiving plan.
Grants and bonds are not generic cash
CESG, additional CESG, CLB, and provincial incentives need correct transfer handling and may have repayment risk if the transfer is not eligible.
Fees may apply
Canada.ca notes that transfers may involve fees, and each provider controls its own transfer-out and transfer-in process.
Timing is operational
Transfer speed can depend on paperwork, liquidation, asset eligibility, provider reconciliation, and grant records.
Records matter
Keep old and new statements so contribution totals, grant history, and future withdrawal records can be checked later.
Example scenario
Example: Parents opened a bank RESP when their child was born, but the provider does not support the provincial incentive they now want and the fees are higher than expected. They choose a new promoter from the official list, confirm it supports the child's benefits, ask the old provider for transfer-out costs, and have the new provider initiate a registered full transfer. After the transfer lands, they compare the final old statement with the first new statement before restarting contributions.
Questions to ask a provider
- Do you support a registered transfer-in for this exact RESP type and beneficiary setup?
- Which benefits will transfer: basic CESG, additional CESG, CLB, BCTESG, QESI, or other provincial incentives?
- Will this be a full transfer, partial transfer, cash transfer, or in-kind transfer?
- What transfer-out fee, account closure fee, deferred sales charge, cancellation charge, or group-plan consequence could apply?
- Could this transfer create excess-contribution, grant repayment, or beneficiary-eligibility issues?
- How long do transfers like this usually take, and can withdrawals still be requested if school starts soon?
- What statements or confirmations will show contribution history and grant balances after the transfer?
Related tool
RESP Provider Checklist helps with this decision. Compare RESP providers by fees, grants, investment options, transfers, and withdrawals.
Provider next step
RESP Provider Checklist helps you confirm whether a promoter supports the grants, bonds, provincial incentives, fees, and withdrawal process your family needs.
Related RESP questions
Related questions answered
Can I transfer an RESP?
Usually, yes, if the plan terms allow it and the receiving RESP can accept the account. The providers should process it as an RESP-to-RESP transfer so contribution history, grants, bonds, provincial incentives, and earnings are handled correctly.
Will RESP grants transfer to the new provider?
They can in an eligible transfer, but CESG, additional CESG, CLB, and provincial incentives have rules. Ask the receiving provider to confirm support and ask the transferring provider whether any incentive repayment could be triggered.
Do RESP providers charge transfer fees?
Some do. Canada.ca warns that RESP transfers may have fees, and provider fee schedules can also include product, closure, or cancellation costs.
How long does an RESP transfer take?
Timing varies by provider, paperwork, account type, whether investments must be sold, and how grant records are reconciled. Ask both providers before starting a transfer near tuition deadlines.