Updated March 2025 · 8 min read

RESP Grants 2025: CESG, CLB, and Provincial Grants

Free Government Money: Every Canadian child qualifies for the CESG — $500/year in free government grants just for contributing $2,500/year to an RESP. Lower-income families can receive an additional $2,000 CLB with no contributions required.

RESP grants are one of the most overlooked sources of free money available to Canadian families. The federal government and several provinces contribute directly to your child's RESP — money that grows tax-sheltered and is used for post-secondary education. Here's a complete breakdown of every grant available in 2025.

1. Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG)

Basic CESG

The Basic CESG is available to all Canadian residents regardless of family income. The government contributes 20% of your annual RESP contributions on the first $2,500 contributed per beneficiary per year.

Annual ContributionCESG ReceivedTotal in RESP
$1,000$200$1,200
$2,000$400$2,400
$2,500$500 (maximum)$3,000
$5,000$500 (capped at $2,500)$5,500

Additional CESG for Lower-Income Families

Families with lower net income receive an additional CESG on the first $500 contributed:

Family Net Income (2025)Additional CESG on First $500Additional Rate
$57,375 or less$10020% additional (40% total)
$57,376 to $114,750$5010% additional (30% total)
Over $114,750$0Basic CESG only (20%)
Lower-Income Maximum: A family earning under $57,375 that contributes $2,500/year receives $500 basic CESG + $100 additional CESG = $600 in annual grants per child.

2. Canada Learning Bond (CLB)

The CLB is free government money for lower-income families — no RESP contribution required. The government deposits it directly into the RESP.

No Contributions Needed: Even if a low-income family can't afford RESP contributions, they should still open an RESP to receive the CLB. The $2,000 lifetime CLB grows tax-free and helps fund post-secondary education at no cost to the family.

3. Provincial RESP Grants

British Columbia: BCTESG

GrantAmountEligibility
BC Training and Education Savings Grant$1,200 (one-time)BC resident; child born on/after Jan 1, 2006; apply between ages 6 and 9

No annual contributions required. Must apply through an RESP provider that offers the BCTESG (most major banks and brokers do).

Quebec: QESI

GrantRateAnnual MaxLifetime Max
Quebec Education Savings Incentive10% on first $2,500/yr$250$3,600

Quebec residents receive the QESI on top of the federal CESG. A Quebec family contributing $2,500/year receives $500 CESG + $250 QESI = $750 in annual grants.

Saskatchewan: SAGES

The Saskatchewan Advantage Grant for Education Savings offered 10% on the first $2,500/year. As of early 2025, the program has been suspended — check the Saskatchewan government website for current status.

CESG Catch-Up Strategy

If you didn't open an RESP at birth, you can catch up on missed CESG. The government allows up to $1,000 in CESG per year (requiring $5,000 in contributions — current year's $2,500 + one prior year's $2,500).

Example: Child is 5 years old and no RESP was ever opened. You've missed 5 years of $500 CESG = $2,500 in missed grants. You can catch up at $500/year over the next 5 years by contributing $5,000/year instead of $2,500.

CESG Age Restrictions

The CESG cannot be paid after December 31 of the year the beneficiary turns 17. Additionally, for children 16 or 17, the CESG is only available if:

This means opening an RESP after age 15 may limit grant eligibility — open early.

Total Potential Grants Summary

GrantWho QualifiesLifetime Max
Basic CESGAll Canadians$7,200
Additional CESGLower/middle income families$7,200 combined with basic
CLBLower-income families$2,000
BCTESGBC residents$1,200
QESIQuebec residents$3,600

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