Short answer: The subscriber generally controls the plan. Contributions belong to the subscriber, while grants and earnings are governed by RESP and education-benefit rules.

An RESP is not one simple ownership bucket. Subscriber contributions generally remain under subscriber control. ESDC's technical material says contributions belong to the subscriber, and CRA says control of subscriber contributions remains with the subscriber.

Government grants, the Canada Learning Bond, provincial incentives, and investment earnings follow RESP rules. They are generally used through Educational Assistance Payments when the beneficiary qualifies for post-secondary education, and EAPs are taxable to the student.

If the RESP is not used for education, contributions may be returned to the subscriber, grants and bonds may have to be repaid, and accumulated income follows separate accumulated income payment or rollover rules.

How to check this rule

  1. Ask the provider for a bucket breakdown: contributions, CESG, CLB, provincial incentives, and earnings.
  2. Check who the subscriber is before assuming a parent owns or controls the plan.
  3. Before withdrawing, ask whether the payment is a contribution refund, EAP, AIP, transfer, or closure payment.
  4. Keep statements showing contribution and grant balances.

Details that matter

Contributions

Contributions are the subscriber's after-tax deposits and are generally the most flexible bucket.

Grants and bonds

Government incentives are not parent-owned spending money and can be repayable in some cases.

Earnings

Investment earnings can be used for EAPs or may follow AIP rules if the RESP is not used for education.

Tax reporting

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

Example

Example: An RESP has $20,000 of contributions, $4,000 of CESG, and $3,000 of earnings. The subscriber's control over the $20,000 contribution bucket is different from the rules for the $7,000 grant-and-growth bucket.

Questions to ask your provider

Read next

Parent control over an RESP 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.

Provider next step

RESP Provider Checklist helps you compare promoters on grant support, fees, and withdrawal process before opening or moving an RESP.

Related RESP questions

Sources to confirm