
A new federal savings program officially launched on July 4, 2026, giving eligible children a government-funded head start on long-term investing before they’ve even started kindergarten. Understanding exactly how these accounts work, who qualifies for the various deposits, and how they compare to other savings tools families already use can help you decide whether opening one makes sense for your household.
What a Trump Account Actually Is
Trump Accounts, officially designated as a new type of individual retirement account under Section 530A of the tax code, were created through the Working Families Tax Cuts legislation and function as a long-term investment vehicle rather than a general-purpose savings account. Unlike a typical custodial savings account a family might open at a bank, these accounts are structured as a variation of a traditional IRA specifically designed for children, meaning the funds are meant to grow over decades rather than being available for near-term expenses like tuition or a first car. Money contributed to a Trump Account is generally invested in low-cost index funds tracking broad U.S. stock market benchmarks, which means the account’s value will fluctuate with market performance rather than sitting untouched in cash the way a basic savings account would. This design reflects the program’s stated purpose, which is to give children exposure to long-term market growth starting from birth, rather than to fund shorter-term goals like college costs or a home purchase, both of which other account types are better suited to handle.
Who Qualifies and What They Can Receive
Eligibility for a Trump Account itself is fairly broad, extending to any child under eighteen who has a valid Social Security number, but the government-funded deposits attached to the program depend heavily on birth date and, in some cases, location. Children born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028, who are U.S. citizens qualify for a one-time $1,000 deposit from the federal government, deposited automatically once a parent or guardian completes the election process. Children born before 2025 don’t qualify for that federal deposit, but a separate charitable initiative funded by the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation provides a $250 deposit to eligible children age ten or younger who live in ZIP codes with median incomes below $150,000, and additional philanthropic pledges from other donors have started extending similar smaller deposits in specific states. It’s worth checking your specific eligibility carefully rather than assuming your child automatically qualifies for the full $1,000, since the birth date window and citizenship requirement are both strict cutoffs rather than general guidelines, and a child born just outside that range will need to rely on other deposit sources or ongoing family contributions instead.
How to Open and Fund an Account
Opening a Trump Account requires an affirmative election on the part of a parent or guardian, meaning accounts aren’t automatically created the moment a child is born or receives a Social Security number. Families can complete this process either by filing IRS Form 4547 or by using the online portal at TrumpAccounts.gov, and the Social Security Administration has also begun allowing parents to initiate this process directly at the hospital when registering a newborn for their Social Security card, which is worth taking advantage of if you’re expecting a child during the eligible window. Once an account is open, contributions from family members, friends, and other individuals are allowed up to a combined limit of $5,000 per year until the child turns eighteen, and this limit is scheduled to be indexed to inflation starting after 2027, meaning it will likely rise gradually over time. Employers can also contribute up to $2,500 annually toward a child’s account, whether that child belongs to an employee or is the employee themselves, which is a detail worth asking your workplace about if this kind of benefit might be available. None of these contributions are tax-deductible when made, but the funds grow on a tax-deferred basis inside the account, similar to how a traditional IRA operates for adults.
What Happens as the Account Grows and Matures
Funds inside a Trump Account are generally inaccessible before the child turns eighteen, at which point the account converts into a standard traditional IRA and the now-adult child becomes the sole individual who can manage and contribute to it going forward. From that point on, ordinary IRA rules apply, including the requirement that any further contributions come from the individual’s own earned income, and standard IRA contribution limits, which sit meaningfully higher than the $5,000 annual limit that applied during childhood, take over. Projections published through the program’s official site estimate that an account receiving only the initial $1,000 government deposit with no further contributions could grow to roughly $6,000 by age eighteen and continue compounding significantly beyond that over subsequent decades, assuming historical average market returns, though these projections depend heavily on actual market performance and shouldn’t be treated as guaranteed outcomes. Families who contribute the maximum allowed amount consistently throughout childhood are looking at a dramatically larger balance by the time the child reaches adulthood, though it’s worth being realistic that consistently maxing out contributions for eighteen years is a significant financial commitment that not every family will be positioned to make.
How Trump Accounts Compare to Other Savings Options
Because Trump Accounts arrived alongside existing tools like 529 college savings plans and custodial Roth IRAs, it’s worth understanding where each one fits best rather than assuming a Trump Account should replace what a family might already be using. A 529 plan remains generally more advantageous specifically for education expenses, since qualified withdrawals from a 529 are tax-free and the account offers more flexibility around what counts as a covered educational cost. A custodial Roth IRA, by contrast, requires the child to have their own earned income before contributions can be made, which makes it inaccessible for younger children who aren’t yet working, whereas a Trump Account has no earned income requirement and can be opened and funded starting at birth. One consideration worth flagging clearly is that because a Trump Account is held directly in the child’s name, it may be counted against the child during financial aid calculations in a way that a 529 plan, which is typically treated more favorably in aid formulas, generally is not. This distinction matters most for families who anticipate needing significant financial aid, since a Trump Account balance sitting in a child’s name could reduce aid eligibility more than an equivalent amount saved in a parent-owned 529 plan.
Weighing Whether an Account Makes Sense for Your Family
For families with a child who qualifies for the $1,000 federal deposit or one of the charitable contributions, opening a Trump Account is a straightforward decision, since it amounts to accepting free money that will then grow over the following eighteen years and beyond with no cost or obligation attached to opening the account itself. The more nuanced decision involves whether to make significant ongoing contributions once the account is open, particularly for families who are also trying to fund a 529 plan, save for other goals, or manage existing debt, since spreading limited savings capacity across multiple account types isn’t always the most efficient strategy for every household. Because the money is locked away until the child turns eighteen and then continues operating under retirement account rules rather than being available for near-term needs, this account works best as a genuine long-term wealth-building tool rather than as a flexible source of funds for college or other expenses arriving sooner. Talking through your specific goals, whether that’s maximizing college funding, building long-term wealth for your child, or some combination of both, with a financial professional familiar with both Trump Accounts and more established savings vehicles can help clarify how this new option fits alongside whatever your family is already doing to plan for your child’s future.