Short answer: It depends on which RESP bucket is withdrawn. EAPs must help the beneficiary further post-secondary education, while subscriber contributions are more flexible but can affect grants.

The answer depends on which part of the RESP is being withdrawn. EAPs include grants and accumulated income and must help the beneficiary further eligible post-secondary education. Subscriber contributions are more flexible because they belong to the subscriber, but withdrawing them can affect grants.

Reasonable EAP expenses can be broader than many families expect, including education costs, student housing, basic personal needs, phone, internet, local transportation, and in some cases a car in the student's name for school transportation.

Unreasonable EAP expenses include costs for family or friends visiting, entertainment, fine dining, vacations, personal spa or wellness treatments, medical and dental appointments, property down payments, and purchases not in the beneficiary's name.

The practical question is not just 'Can I spend it?' It is 'Which RESP bucket is paying, is the student eligible, does the expense further post-secondary education, and will the promoter accept the request?'

How to check this rule

  1. Identify whether the withdrawal is an EAP, a contribution withdrawal, or a mix.
  2. Confirm the student is enrolled in an eligible post-secondary program if requesting an EAP.
  3. Match the expense to school costs, housing, basic needs, or transportation.
  4. Flag anything discretionary, family-related, medical, vacation-related, or property-related before requesting an EAP.
  5. Ask the promoter for written clarification when the expense is unusual.

Details that matter

Bucket first

EAPs and subscriber contributions are governed differently.

Education connection

For EAPs, the expense should help the student further post-secondary education.

Unusual costs need caution

The promoter may request documentation, and CRA can audit any EAP.

Non-education use has consequences

Using RESP money outside education rules can lead to grant repayment, tax, or an unavailable withdrawal type.

Example

Example: A student asks whether RESP money can pay for groceries, a phone plan, and concert tickets. Groceries and phone costs may fit basic student living needs. Concert tickets usually do not, unless they are required for the program.

Questions to ask your provider

Read next

Withdraw RESP money explains the broader decision and links to related tools.

Tool next step

RESP Withdrawal Checklist can help estimate the practical contribution choices before you confirm eligibility with the promoter.

Related RESP questions

Sources to confirm