Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Canada Education Savings Strategies 2025

Building a complete education funding plan requires coordinating RESPs, government grants, tax-efficient investments, TFSAs, and strategic withdrawals. This framework brings it all together into an actionable 18-year roadmap.

Core Strategy: Open RESP at birth. Contribute $2,500/year for CESG. Apply for CLB. Invest in growth ETFs. Use TFSA as overflow. Plan EAP withdrawals strategically. Claim all tax credits.

Year 0 — Open the RESP at Birth

Open an RESP as soon as your child has a SIN (usually within weeks of birth). Every month of delay is lost CESG room. At a discount broker (Questrade, Wealthsimple), this takes 30 minutes online. Apply for CLB at the same time if household income qualifies.

Years 1–14 — Maximize Grants

Contribute $2,500/year ($208/month via automatic transfer) to capture $500/year CESG. Lower-income families receive an additional $50–100/year from enhanced CESG. After 14.4 years of full contributions, the $7,200 lifetime CESG cap is reached. Invest in a growth-oriented all-in-one ETF (XGRO or VGRO).

Catch-Up If You Started Late

Contribute $5,000/year to capture current-year CESG plus one year of catch-up ($1,000 total CESG/year). Starting at age 5 with catch-up contributions, you can still capture the full $7,200 lifetime CESG by age 17 with consistent effort.

Years 14–17 — Shift to Conservative Investments

Gradually de-risk the portfolio: shift from XGRO to XBAL, then toward GICs and short-term bonds. By age 17, 60–70% should be in low-volatility instruments. Tuition is due in months — protect against a sudden market correction decimating the fund.

TFSA as Education Overflow

Once annual CESG room is maximized, direct additional education savings to a TFSA. The TFSA grows tax-free and can supplement RESP withdrawals during school or be redirected if plans change. It's the ideal safety valve for education savings uncertainty.

Study Years — EAP Withdrawal Strategy

Take EAPs in the years of lowest student income — typically first year (pre-co-op, no part-time income) and any year with reduced earnings. Take PSE (contribution) withdrawals in later years. Spreading $30,000 in EAPs across four years at $7,500/year keeps the student in the lowest tax bracket each year.

Tax Credits — Don't Leave Money Behind

File the student's tax return every year — even with zero income — to establish RRSP room and carry forward tuition credits. Transfer up to $5,000 in unused tuition credits to parents if they have high income. Claim student loan interest annually. Report scholarship T4As and claim the full exemption.

The 18-Year Numbers

$2,500/year × 18 years = $45,000 contributions. CESG grants = $7,200. Total invested = $52,200. At 7% annual return = approximately $115,000 at year 18. This fully funds a 4-year degree at most Canadian universities when combined with OSAP grants and modest part-time income.

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