The Canada Learning Bond (CLB) is one of the most underutilized government benefits in Canada. It deposits free money directly into a child's Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP) for eligible low-income families — no contributions required. Yet hundreds of thousands of eligible children never receive it simply because their families don't know it exists or haven't opened an RESP.
The CLB is a federal government grant deposited into an RESP for children from low- and modest-income families. It was created specifically to help families who cannot afford to save for post-secondary education still benefit from the RESP system.
The CLB provides:
Eligibility is based on family income and the number of children. For 2024, approximate income thresholds are:
The exact income thresholds are tied to the National Child Benefit Supplement (NCBS) phase-out thresholds, which are updated annually by the federal government. The child must also:
You do not apply directly to the government for the CLB. Instead:
You must file your taxes every year for continued annual $100 payments to flow, even if you owe nothing and have no income to report. The CLB eligibility check runs through your filed tax data.
The take-up rate for the Canada Learning Bond among eligible families is shockingly low — estimated at under 40% in many communities. Reasons include:
You can open an RESP at any major bank, credit union, or investment dealer. For CLB-specific assistance:
CLB funds in an RESP can be used for any eligible post-secondary education — university, college, trade school, apprenticeship programs. Withdrawals for education are called Educational Assistance Payments (EAPs) and are taxed as income in the student's hands, not the parents'. Since most students have low income, the tax is minimal or zero.
If the CLB recipient doesn't pursue post-secondary education, the Canada Learning Bond must be returned to the government. The CLB itself belongs to the child and cannot be kept by parents if not used for education. However, any investment growth on the CLB within the RESP can be withdrawn (as an Accumulated Income Payment), subject to tax plus a 20% penalty.
The Canada Learning Bond and the Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG) are separate programs:
A family qualifying for the CLB can also receive CESG on any contributions they make, making the RESP even more valuable.
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