RESP guide: Making the shift from saving for your child’s post-secondary education, to funding it
Parents may spend years contributing to registered education savings plans for their kids, but only realize when it’s time to pay for college or university how little information there is about the right way to make withdrawals. Here’s step-by-step advice from a Certified Financial Planner.
Thanks for the very useful review. We’ve been on autopilot mode over many years accumulating in our RESPs, but the withdrawal phase indeed takes some planning. We are less than 5 years away from starting to draw down funds for our oldest, and due to that limited investment horizon I’ve been spending a LOT more time thinking about his portfolio asset allocation than any of my other accounts! With stock indexes at all time highs, bond yields & GIC rates at historical lows, there is very little place to hide to preserve your gains. Any advice on that?
Due to the large volume of comments we receive, we regret that we are unable to respond directly to each one. We invite you to email your question to [email protected], where it will be considered for a future response by one of our expert columnists. For personal advice, we suggest consulting with a qualified advisor.
I am a grandparent with a family plan for 3 grandchildren.
One question – are the withdrawals of the EAP and the contributions (PSE) tied to each other in any way, or totally independent? If they are independent, then should one take out all of the EAP first (up to the beneficiary’s tax threshold as you say) to avoid any penalty tax on any remainder?
Due to the large volume of comments we receive, we regret that we are unable to respond directly to each one. We invite you to email your question to [email protected], where it will be considered for a future response by one of our expert columnists. For personal advice, we suggest consulting with a qualified advisor.
Hey Jason, good article. I know you mentioned the limitation of $5k for the first 13 weeks (usually ends the first week in Dec), but for tax planning purposes, you should also mention that it would likely be a good idea to pull out even more before the end of the calendar year to get the beneficiary up to the federal and/or provincial tax exemption. I know you mention the federal tax exemption, but my guess is that most people don’t connect the 2 things, and by the time they realize they could have pulled out more EAP and paid no tax, it’s too late! In any case, keep up the good work!
I have a 9 year old and 5 year old. Approx RESP savings is 60K. Am I on track to save enough for my kids? I have been maximizing the grants every year.
Due to the large volume of comments we receive, we regret that we are unable to respond directly to each one. We invite you to email your question to [email protected], where it will be considered for a future response by one of our expert columnists. For personal advice, we suggest consulting with a qualified advisor.
“Post-Secondary Education (PSE) withdrawals represent the contributions originally made by the subscriber. These withdrawals can be taken at any time, without tax payable and for any reason. They can be directed to the subscriber, to the beneficiary or sent to an educational institution.”
My financial institution tells me that I cannot withdraw this amount until the children have graduated university. Are they incorrect? Or is the quoted section above misleading?