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RESP vs Student Loans: Which Is Better for Education Funding? (2026)

Updated

RESP vs Student Loans: Quick Comparison

FeatureRESPStudent Loans
Free money20-40% government grantsNo grants
RepaymentNever (it’s savings)Yes, after graduation
InterestGrowth is tax-deferredInterest accrues (prime rate)
Impact on studentNoneDebt burden
FlexibilityFixed for educationCan cover any expense
Who funds itParents/familyGovernment + banks

RESP Advantages

Government Grants

GrantMatching RateMaximum
Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG)20%$500/year ($7,200 lifetime)
Additional CESG (low income)Extra 10-20%$100/year
Canada Learning Bond (CLB)$500-2,000No contribution required
Provincial grantsVariesVaries by province

Example: $2,500 Annual Contribution

ComponentAmount
Your contribution$2,500
CESG (20%)$500
Total in RESP$3,000
Instant return20%

Tax-Deferred Growth

ScenarioRESPTaxable Account
Initial deposit$2,500$2,500
CESG$500$0
Starting amount$3,000$2,500
Growth (7% × 18 years)$10,150$6,450 (after tax)
Total at age 18$13,150$8,950

Student Loan Features

Canada Student Loans

FeatureDetails
Interest rateCanada prime
Interest during schoolNo payment required
6-month grace periodAfter graduation, interest accrues
Repayment AssistanceIf income low after graduation
Interest tax credit15% credit on interest paid

Provincial Student Aid (e.g., OSAP)

FeatureDetails
Combined with federalOne application
Grant portionNo repayment (income-based)
Loan portionRequires repayment
Maximum~$350/week (varies)

When Student Loans Make Sense

SituationStudent Loans Are OK
RESP insufficientFill the gap
Qualifying for grantsNon-repayable portion
Low-income familyMore grants than loans
Professional programHigh future income

Optimal Strategy: Use Both

Priority Order

PriorityFunding SourceWhy
1RESP funds firstFree money, no repayment
2Student loan grantsNon-repayable portion
3Part-time workIncome + experience
4Student loans (loan portion)If needed, favorable terms
5Private loans/creditLast resort only

Withdrawing from RESP

ComponentTax Treatment
ContributionsTax-free withdrawal
Grants + Growth (EAP)Taxable to student
Typical student tax rateVery low (often 0%)

Strategy: Spread EAP Over Years

YearEAP WithdrawalIn Student’s Low Income
Year 1$5,000Minimal tax
Year 2$5,000Minimal tax
Year 3$5,000Minimal tax
Year 4$5,000Minimal tax

Cost Comparison: 4-Year Degree

Scenario A: Using RESP

FactorAmount
Total cost (tuition + living)$80,000
RESP available$60,000
Part-time work$15,000
Small student loan$5,000
Debt at graduation$5,000

Scenario B: Student Loans Only

FactorAmount
Total cost$80,000
Student loan grants~$10,000
Part-time work$15,000
Student loans$55,000
Debt at graduation$55,000

10-Year Repayment Comparison

FactorScenario AScenario B
Principal$5,000$55,000
Interest (5% over 10 years)~$1,400~$15,400
Total repaid$6,400$70,400
Monthly payment$53$587

What If No RESP Exists?

Starting Late (Child Age 10+)

StrategyAction
Maximize catch-up grantsCan get $1,000 CESG in one year
Contribute $5,000/yearCatches up on grant room
8 years of contributionsStill significant savings

Starting at Age 0 vs 10

Start AgeContributionGrantsGrowth (7%)Total at 18
Age 0$2,500/yr × 18$7,200~$42,000~$94,000
Age 10$5,000/yr × 8$7,200~$12,000~$59,000

If the Child Doesn’t Go to School

RESP Options

OptionDetails
Transfer beneficiaryTo sibling, cousin, etc.
RESP stays openUp to 35 years
Transfer to RRSPUp to $50,000 (if RRSP room)
Withdraw with penaltyGrant returned, growth taxed + 20% penalty
ContributionsAlways withdraw tax-free

Student Loans: No Funds to Return

If no RESP, the student simply doesn’t have that funding — nothing to “return” but also no debt specifically from unused education savings.

Summary: RESP Wins

FactorRESP Advantage
Free money20-40% grants
No repaymentEver
Tax-deferred growth18 years compound
Student starts debt-freeMajor life benefit
FlexibilityCan use for any education

Bottom line: Contribute to RESP as early as possible. Use student loans only to fill gaps.