I am looking to establish a new RESP plan for each of my kids.
Just wondering what everyone else is using and your opinions.
I am looking to establish a new RESP plan for each of my kids.
Just wondering what everyone else is using and your opinions.
I just set mine up at my bank. I'm sure there are better ones out there with respects to the rate of return but I was mostly after the portion that the government kicks in (20% on the first $2000).
"Masked Bandit is a gateway drug for frugal spending." - Unknown303
2007 this changed to 20% on the first $2500.Originally posted by Masked Bandit
... but I was mostly after the portion that the government kicks in (20% on the first $2000).
Talk to your bank.
Originally posted by Paul
2007 this changed to 20% on the first $2500.
Talk to your bank.
Thanks for the tip. I was going to have to go in and adjust anyways as number 2 will be showing up any day now.
"Masked Bandit is a gateway drug for frugal spending." - Unknown303
there have been many changes to the contribution room, grants, and even the forms. Talk to your advisor and he/she can't help you maximize your contributions.
pre-congrats on #2 then.
"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." - Albert Einstein
Contrats on a 2nd...
I just set up a savings account for my daughter its not able to be touched until 2025, the day she turns 18 i put about 200 bucks a month into it so without the interest there should be around 43000 in there for her to do as she pleases...So she better thanks me once she hits 18...lol...i didnt even get 20 bucks from my rents when i was 18...haha
If you put $200/month in there for 18 years, she will have substantially more than $43K when she's 18. At 8% it should be somewhere in the $140K range.Originally posted by ZC_CIVIC
Contrats on a 2nd...
I just set up a savings account for my daughter its not able to be touched until 2025, the day she turns 18 i put about 200 bucks a month into it so without the interest there should be around 43000 in there for her to do as she pleases...So she better thanks me once she hits 18...lol...i didnt even get 20 bucks from my rents when i was 18...haha
More like 80kOriginally posted by lint
If you put $200/month in there for 18 years, she will have substantially more than $43K when she's 18. At 8% it should be somewhere in the $140K range.
86359.45$
Good thing is if your kids never use it to go to school, you can roll it over into your RRSP.
i didnt add the interest rate in there just the 200X12X18..that was like 43200 or somthing like that...but who knows how much it will be...but yeah i dont think she will use it for school iether...haha she will probably go out and buy a car or somthing..
^Thats the spirit, way to pull for your kids.
Autosignature
Let's split the diff and say $111K.Originally posted by 2EFNFAST
More like 80k
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/my_m...lator/tool.jsp
Using $0 current, $2400/year and 8% return
Year RESP Contribution CESG RESP + CESG Balance at end of year
1 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $3,013.31
2 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $6,267.69
3 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $9,782.42
4 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $13,578.32
5 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $17,677.90
6 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $22,105.44
7 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $26,887.19
8 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $32,051.48
9 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $37,628.91
10 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $43,652.53
11 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $50,158.05
12 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $57,184.00
13 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $64,772.04
14 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $72,967.11
15 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $81,817.79
16 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $91,376.53
17 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $101,699.96
18 $1,200.00 $240.00 $1,440.00 $111,384.74
My dad's post secondary education was almost free.
My post post secondary cost me $20K (12 years ago), living @ home.
My sister post secondary cost her $30K (7 years ago), living @ home.
So if the cost of education is rising by 40% every 5 years, and your kid is just born, you're looking at $134K to obtain a degree of any kind in an average school, living @ home.
So $111K is nothing.
My question is, can you still get full student loan if your parents have a RESP? And use RESP to repay the loan when school is done?
Last edited by Xtrema; 01-01-2008 at 01:55 PM.
Both my kids are set-up with Children's Educational Fund Inc, http://cefi.ca/en/index2.html; I get Air Miles too
As another benchmark my post secondary cost me ~$80K living away from home. This includes tuition, housing, all expenses.Originally posted by Xtrema
My dad's post secondary education was almost free.
My post post secondary cost me $20K (12 years ago), living @ home.
My sister post secondary cost her $30K (7 years ago), living @ home.
So if the cost of education is rising by 40% every 5 years, and your kid is just born, you're looking at $134K to obtain a degree of any kind in an average school, living @ home.
So $111K is nothing.
My question is, can you still get full student loan if your parents have a RESP? And use RESP to repay the loan when school is done?
Completed in 2001.
Well,Originally posted by lint
Let's split the diff and say $111K.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/my_m...lator/tool.jsp
Using $0 current, $2400/year and 8% return
Year RESP Contribution CESG RESP + CESG Balance at end of year
1 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $3,013.31
2 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $6,267.69
3 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $9,782.42
4 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $13,578.32
5 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $17,677.90
6 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $22,105.44
7 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $26,887.19
8 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $32,051.48
9 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $37,628.91
10 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $43,652.53
11 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $50,158.05
12 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $57,184.00
13 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $64,772.04
14 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $72,967.11
15 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $81,817.79
16 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $91,376.53
17 $2,400.00 $400.00 $2,800.00 $101,699.96
18 $1,200.00 $240.00 $1,440.00 $111,384.74
You can put in $2500/year up to a lifetime max of $50,000. PLUS CESG, CLB, and the Alberta Grants, the child would be getting a lot more.
"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." - Albert Einstein
I was using the $200/month that zc_civic indicated for the example.Originally posted by Rav4Guy
Well,
You can put in $2500/year up to a lifetime max of $50,000. PLUS CESG, CLB, and the Alberta Grants, the child would be getting a lot more.
If you have the means, the best return will be to dump $50K in there and let it grow for 18 years.
^ true but then you don't get future governemnt grants.
"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." - Albert Einstein
They've run the scenario in the finance section of the globe and mail. Even forgoing the rest of the CESG, the compounding of the initial $50K lump sum will outweigh the loss of the additional free money from the gov't. You will end up quite a bit ahead.Originally posted by Rav4Guy
^ true but then you don't get future governemnt grants.