Updated March 2026 · 10 min read
An in-trust account (ITA) — also called an "in-trust for" account — is an informal trust arrangement where an adult holds and manages money on behalf of a minor child. It's one of the most common ways Canadians save for children outside of registered accounts like RESPs. Here's everything you need to know in 2026.
When the child reaches 18 and the trust transfers, KOHO is a great first no-fee account. Free e-transfers, cashback, no monthly fee.
Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYAAn in-trust account is an informal trust — not a formal legal trust established by deed. The account is titled "John Smith in trust for Jane Smith" (or "ITF Jane Smith"), meaning John is managing the money for Jane's benefit. In-trust accounts at banks are informally set up products; they are not formal trusts under provincial trust law. This distinction has important tax and legal implications.
The CRA's income attribution rules apply to in-trust accounts:
Most Big 5 banks (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC) and discount brokerages (TD Direct Investing, RBC Direct Investing, Questrade) support in-trust accounts for both savings and investment purposes.
| Feature | In-Trust Account | RESP |
|---|---|---|
| Government grants | None | CESG: 20% on first $2,500/year (max $500/yr) |
| Tax on growth | Attribution rules apply | Tax-deferred until withdrawal |
| Withdrawal restrictions | None (once transferred to child) | Must be used for education |
| Contribution limit | Unlimited | $50,000 lifetime per child |
| What happens if child doesn't attend school | N/A | Grants returned, income taxed on withdrawal |
| Investment options | Any (savings, stocks, ETFs) | Any (same) |
Under common law, once money is gifted to a minor through an in-trust account, it legally belongs to the child. The trustee (adult) cannot take the money back for personal use. At age 18 (or 19 in BC and Nova Scotia), the child can demand full transfer of the account. This irrevocability is an important consideration — if you might need the funds back, an in-trust structure is not appropriate.
In-trust accounts excel when you want to give a child money for non-education purposes — a down payment on a house, starting a business, or general life savings. Because there are no withdrawal restrictions (unlike RESPs), the child can use the funds for anything when they turn 18.
Yes. You can open an in-trust brokerage account at Questrade, TD Direct Investing, RBC Direct Investing, or any discount broker. Capital gains in these accounts are taxed in the child's hands (not attributed to the adult), making growth investments particularly tax-efficient in this structure.
Not always required at account opening, but for investment accounts and tax reporting, a SIN is needed. You can apply for a child's SIN at any Service Canada office at no cost using their birth certificate.
Guardians can open in-trust accounts in the same way as parents. Attribution rules still apply if funds came from a parent of the child. Grandparent contributions have slightly different attribution rules — consult a tax professional if large sums are involved.
When your child turns 18 and takes control of their savings, KOHO is Canada's best no-fee first account. Free, instant, and no branch visit required.
Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYA