Short answer: Once the student is enrolled in an eligible post-secondary program, RESP withdrawals can help with tuition, books, student fees, rent, basic living costs, transportation, and some school-related equipment.

Once the beneficiary is enrolled in an eligible post-secondary program, RESP money can often support more than tuition. Canada.ca examples include tuition, books, tools, transportation, and rent.

CRA's EAP guidance also treats many student-life costs as potentially reasonable when they help the student further post-secondary education. Examples include student fees, course materials, moving costs, rent, utilities, a computer, phone, internet, food, basic clothing, toiletries, basic furniture, and local transportation.

The standard is not unlimited spending. The cost still needs to be in line with furthering the student's post-secondary education, and the RESP promoter can be more restrictive than the general CRA examples.

Families should keep proof of enrolment, withdrawal confirmations, receipts for larger purchases, and a simple note about how unusual expenses connect to school.

How to check this rule

  1. Confirm the student is enrolled full-time or part-time in an eligible post-secondary program.
  2. Ask the promoter how much is available as EAP and how much is available as subscriber contributions.
  3. List the term's costs: tuition, fees, books, equipment, housing, food, transportation, phone, internet, and moving costs.
  4. Request the withdrawal before tuition, rent, or moving deadlines.
  5. Keep records in case the promoter or CRA asks for support later.

Details that matter

Not tuition-only

RESP withdrawals can support a broader student budget when the conditions are met.

Reasonable cost test

Even a listed expense can become unreasonable if the amount does not fit the education purpose.

Promoter discretion

The RESP promoter decides what documentation it needs and may be stricter than the CRA examples.

Tax slips

EAPs are generally taxable to the student beneficiary and reported on a T4A slip.

Example

Example: A first-year college student has tuition, textbooks, residence fees, a laptop, phone plan, groceries, and a bus pass. Those costs can fit the education purpose when the student is enrolled and the promoter accepts the request.

Questions to ask your provider

Read next

Withdraw RESP money explains the broader decision and links to related tools.

Tool next step

RESP Withdrawal Checklist can help estimate the practical contribution choices before you confirm eligibility with the promoter.

Related RESP questions

Sources to confirm