How to use this page: Read the simplified explanation first, then use the official links below before acting.

Plain-language summary

Action steps

  1. Ask your provider for the RESP opening date and the exact last contribution year and last plan-closure year showing on its system.
  2. If you are moving an RESP to a new provider, ask whether the transfer will carry over an earlier effective date instead of assuming the clock restarts.
  3. If the beneficiary may not use the RESP soon, review the remaining balance now as three buckets: your contributions, grants, and growth.
  4. If a disability-based extension might matter, confirm before the 31st year whether the beneficiary qualifies for the Disability Tax Credit and whether the RESP is a non-family plan that allows the extension.
  5. Do not wait until the final year to ask about closing options, because accumulated income payment rules, grant repayments, and transfer paperwork can take time.

Caveats to watch

Examples

Example: contributions stop before the plan must close

A parent opened an RESP in 2000. The provider may stop accepting regular contributions after the 31-year contribution window, but the RESP could still remain open longer while the family uses eligible withdrawals or decides how to close the remaining balance before the plan's termination deadline.

Example: transfer does not reset the clock

A family transfers an RESP from one bank to another in 2026 and assumes the new account starts fresh. CRA says transfer history can carry an earlier effective date into the receiving RESP, so the family needs the new provider to confirm the real remaining timeline instead of relying on the 2026 transfer date.

What this means in real life

Questions to ask your provider

Official sources