Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

RESP vs. TFSA for Education Savings Canada 2025

Both RESPs and TFSAs offer tax-free growth. The critical difference is that RESPs come with government grants worth up to $9,200 per child. Understanding when to use each account — and how to combine them — maximizes your family's education savings.

Bottom Line: Use RESP first to capture all government grants. Once grant room is maximized each year, use TFSA for additional savings. Never leave free government money on the table.

The Grant Advantage

The CESG adds 20% to your first $2,500 annually — a guaranteed 20% return. No TFSA investment can guarantee this. Over 14 years of full contributions, government grants add $7,200 to the RESP before any investment growth. This grant advantage is the defining reason RESPs win for education savings.

Tax Treatment

RESP: Contributions with after-tax dollars. Growth tax-sheltered. Withdrawals split — PSE contributions tax-free to subscriber, EAPs (grants + growth) taxed to student at their low rate. TFSA: Contributions with after-tax dollars. Growth tax-free. All withdrawals completely tax-free to account holder.

Flexibility

TFSA wins on flexibility. TFSA money has no restrictions — use it for anything at any time. RESP funds restricted to educational use; non-educational use triggers grant repayment and penalties on investment income. If educational plans are uncertain, TFSA provides essential optionality.

Contribution Room

RESP: $50,000 lifetime per beneficiary, no annual limit. TFSA: $7,000/year (2025) for individuals 18+, accumulates from age 18. TFSAs can only be held by individuals 18+, so there's no "child TFSA" — parents or grandparents hold their own TFSA and can later help fund education from it.

Optimal Strategy

  1. Open RESP at birth, contribute $2,500/year to maximize CESG
  2. Apply for CLB if income qualifies
  3. Once annual CESG room is captured, additional education savings go to TFSA
  4. TFSA serves as flexible backup if child doesn't pursue education
  5. If child goes to school, draw from RESP first, TFSA as supplement

When TFSA Beats RESP

TFSA is better if: you have already contributed $2,500 to RESP that year, you have already reached $50,000 lifetime RESP limit, you want full flexibility for non-educational use, or the child is over 17 and CESG eligibility is finished. In all other situations, RESP grants give the RESP a clear advantage.

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