Trump Accounts Explained: A New Child Savings Account For Family Wealth Planning

Ken Hargreaves, CFP®, AIF®, AWMA®, CRPC®

Simply put, many Americans don’t begin investing early or often enough. In fact, only 64% of non-retired adults had a tax-preferred retirement account or defined benefit pension in a recent household survey, and only 34% believed their retirement savings were on track.¹ By the time one feels the urgency, you may already be trying to make up for years of missed compounding. If only you had started earlier, you might find yourself asking.

It’s no surprise that many Americans don’t start investing on time. Children are rarely taught enough about personal finance before they’re expected to make real financial decisions. A visible investment account can fast-track a child’s financial literacy. A family can show a child how a diversified fund’s value changes, how regular contributions add up, why low costs matter, and why money invested for decades behaves differently from money kept for short-term spending.

That’s why the new Trump Account, created under Public Law 119-21, deserves attention for families with eligible children and those planning to have children.² Used thoughtfully, it can give a child an early investment balance, a longer runway for compounding, and a practical way for parents and grandparents to teach how markets, contributions, fees, taxes, and patience work over time.

What Trump Accounts Are

A Trump Account is a traditional IRA established for the exclusive benefit of an eligible individual and designated as a Trump Account when it’s created.³ The child is the account owner and beneficiary, while an authorized adult handles the election and setup. Current guidance states that an authorized person may be a legal guardian, parent, adult sibling, or grandparent, in that order, unless the election is made at the same time as the pilot contribution election.³

The account has a special childhood phase called the growth period. During that phase, the account follows special rules for contributions, investments, distributions, and reporting. That period ends before January 1 of the calendar year in which the child turns 18.³ After that phase, the account generally moves under the traditional IRA rules for contributions, distributions, required minimum distributions, rollovers, Roth conversions, ordinary income taxation, and reporting.

Comparing Tax-Advantaged Accounts for Children

Each account serves a different goal. Here is how the Trump Account stacks up against the more familiar options.

Trump Account

Retirement-Style

Primary Goal

Long-term investing and early retirement-style compounding

Earned Income Required

No, during the growth period

Annual Contribution Cap

$5,000 combined from most sources during the growth period

Investment Options

Qualifying low-cost U.S. index funds and ETFs only

Withdrawal Treatment

Limited during growth period, then traditional IRA rules apply

529 Plan

Education

Primary Goal

Qualified education expenses, K through graduate school

Earned Income Required

No

Annual Contribution Cap

No federal cap, subject to gift tax rules and plan limits

Investment Options

State-sponsored portfolios chosen by the plan

Withdrawal Treatment

Tax-free for qualified education, otherwise taxes and a penalty may apply

Custodial Account

UTMA / UGMA

Primary Goal

Flexible savings for any benefit of the child

Earned Income Required

No

Annual Contribution Cap

No cap, subject to gift tax rules

Investment Options

Broad, including stocks, bonds, funds, and ETFs

Withdrawal Treatment

Available anytime for the child's benefit, subject to kiddie tax rules

Roth IRA for Child

Retirement

Primary Goal

Tax-free retirement growth once the child has earned income

Earned Income Required

Yes, documented compensation is needed

Annual Contribution Cap

Up to the annual Roth IRA limit or earned income, whichever is less

Investment Options

Broad, including stocks, bonds, funds, and ETFs

Withdrawal Treatment

Contributions out anytime, qualified earnings tax-free after age 59½

For educational purposes only. Account rules, limits, and tax treatment are subject to change and depend on individual circumstances. Consult a qualified advisor before acting.

The key difference from a regular child IRA is that contributions can be made during the growth period even if the child has no includible compensation. Usually, a child’s Roth IRA requires taxable compensation.⁵ A Trump Account may allow families to start retirement-style investing before the child has a summer job, W-2 wages, or documented self-employment income.

Families should still avoid treating it like a fully flexible child savings account. During the growth period, distributions are limited, investment choices are restricted, and later withdrawals generally fall under traditional IRA rules. The account can be powerful as a long-term investing lane, but it isn’t designed for every childhood expense.

How The $1,000 Pilot Contribution Works

The headline feature is the pilot contribution for eligible children born from 2025 through 2028. An eligible child for the pilot program generally means a qualifying child who’s born after December 31, 2024, and before January 1, 2029, who’s a U.S. citizen, has a Social Security number included with the election, and hasn’t already had a pilot election made.³ The pilot contribution is $1,000 and is paid to the child’s Trump Account.

However, that doesn’t mean every child receives automatic funding without action; families should confirm the final administrative steps before assuming the deposit is in place.

How Contributions And Investments Work During Childhood

Contributions can’t begin before July 4, 2026.³ During the growth period, there are five contribution types: the $1,000 pilot contribution, qualified general contributions funded by certain governments or section 501(c)(3) organizations, employer contributions under section 128, trustee-to-trustee rollover contributions from another Trump Account, and contributions from other sources such as parents, the child, or another person.³

Pilot contributions, qualified general contributions, and qualified rollover contributions aren’t subject to the annual contribution limit. Section 128 employer contributions and other contributions are generally subject to a combined annual limit of $5,000 during the growth period, with cost-of-living adjustments after 2027.³ Employer contributions can be up to $2,500, are subject to the combined $5,000 cap, and may be excluded from the employee’s income if the program meets the applicable requirements.³

Inside the Growth Period

Five ways money can flow into a Trump Account, paired with the narrow rules that govern how it gets invested.

Funding Sources

Five Contribution Types

Pilot Contribution

One-time federal seed for eligible children born 2025 through 2028

$1,000 ONE-TIME

Qualified General Contributions

From certain governments or 501(c)(3) organizations

NO ANNUAL CAP

Employer Contributions

Made under Section 128, may be excluded from employee income

UP TO $2,500

Other Contributions

Parents, grandparents, the child, or another person

SHARES $5,000 CAP

Trustee-to-Trustee Rollovers

Qualified transfers in from another Trump Account

NO ANNUAL CAP
Employer contributions and other contributions are subject to a combined annual limit of $5,000 during the growth period, with cost-of-living adjustments after 2027.

Investment Guardrails

Qualifying Funds Must Meet All

  • Mutual fund or exchange-traded fund structure
  • Tracks an index of primarily U.S. companies
  • Does not use leverage
  • Annual fees and expenses of no more than 0.1% of account balance
  • Meets other criteria set under the Trump Account rules
These guardrails limit customization and tax-loss harvesting, but they also keep costs low and the strategy simple during a child's longest compounding years.

For educational purposes only. Rules and limits reflect current guidance and are subject to change. Consult a qualified advisor before making contribution or investment decisions.

Investment choice is intentionally narrow. During the growth period, assets must be invested in qualifying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds that track an index of primarily U.S. companies, don’t use leverage, have annual fees and expenses of no more than 0.1 percent of the account balance, and meet other criteria.³ It also limits customization, tax-loss harvesting opportunities, and portfolio design choices that may be available in a taxable account.

What A Head Start Could Look Like

The power of the account depends less on the label and more on the funding habit. A one-time $1,000 seed is helpful, but regular contributions are what make the math more meaningful. The graph below assumes a $1,000 starting deposit, $5,000 contributed at the end of each year from age 1 through age 17, and a hypothetical 7% average annual return. Keep in mind, it isn’t a guarantee, forecast, or investment recommendation. Actual returns will vary, and markets can decline.

A Head Start, Year by Year

Hypothetical growth of a Trump Account funded with a $1,000 seed deposit and $5,000 contributed at the end of each year from age 1 through age 17, at an assumed 7% average annual return.

Total Contributions

$86,000

Growth from Compounding

$71,360

Balance at Age 18

$157,360

Contributions
Growth from Compounding
$200k $160k $120k $80k $40k $0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 17 Age of Child

Hypothetical illustration for educational purposes only. Not a forecast, guarantee, or recommendation. Returns are assumed at a constant 7% annual rate; actual market returns vary and markets can decline. Taxes, fees, and other costs are not reflected.

The account also creates a natural financial education. A parent or grandparent could review the account once a year with the child and ask: how much came from contributions, how much came from market growth, what the fund owned, what it cost, and why the value moved up or down. Those conversations can teach more than a lecture because the child can see the numbers attached to their own future.

The Tax And Withdrawal Tradeoff

A Trump Account can look flexible on the contribution side and restrictive on the withdrawal side. During the growth period, ordinary distributions generally aren’t allowed. Limited exceptions include qualified rollover contributions, qualified ABLE rollover contributions, excess contribution distributions, and distributions upon the death of the account beneficiary.³

Four Narrow Exits During Childhood

During the growth period, the account is essentially locked. These are the only ways funds can move, and each is an administrative exit rather than a normal withdrawal.

Qualified Rollover Contributions

Account Move

Funds transfer trustee-to-trustee from one Trump Account into another. The child never receives cash. Useful when changing custodians or consolidating accounts.

Movement of money, not access to money.

Qualified ABLE Rollover Contributions

Disability Transfer

For an eligible disabled beneficiary, funds may roll into an ABLE account, subject to ABLE rules. The transfer is permitted only in the calendar year the beneficiary turns 17.

Tax-advantaged transfer, narrow timing window.

Excess Contribution Distributions

Administrative Fix

If contributions exceed allowable limits, the overage may be removed to bring the account back into compliance. This is a correction step, not a planning withdrawal.

Mechanical cleanup, not flexible access.

Distributions Upon Death

Beneficiary Settlement

If the child passes away during the growth period, the account distributes under death-beneficiary rules. The account ceases to be a Trump Account at that point.

Estate settlement path, not a planned exit.

Hardship distributions are not permitted during the growth period, and the account cannot be closed early to release funds to the child. Ordinary spending access only becomes available once the account converts to traditional IRA rules at age 18.

For educational purposes only. Rules reflect IRS Notice 2025-68 and are subject to change as Treasury issues further guidance. Consult a qualified advisor before making contribution or distribution decisions.

Once the growth period ends, traditional IRA rules generally apply. That means withdrawals may be taxable as ordinary income, and early distributions may be subject to the 10% additional tax unless an exception applies, such as certain qualified higher education expenses, first-home purchases, or distributions after age 59½.⁶ The account may also eventually become part of required minimum distribution planning under the traditional IRA framework.³

Families also need to track basis carefully. During the growth period, pilot contributions, qualified general contributions, and section 128 employer contributions don’t create basis in the Trump Account. Contributions from other sources create basis, and qualified rollover contributions carry over basis from the prior Trump Account.³

How It Fits Beside 529 Plans, Custodial Accounts, And Roth IRAs

A Trump Account doesn’t eliminate the need for other child planning tools. A 529 plan may still be the better first account for families focused on education because qualified education withdrawals can receive favorable tax treatment, and current law allows some 529-to-Roth IRA rollovers subject to rules, annual Roth limits, and a $35,000 lifetime cap.⁴,⁷ A taxable custodial account may still be useful when the family wants broader flexibility for non-education and non-retirement goals, even though taxes, financial aid, and control issues need to be reviewed.

The best order depends on the family’s priorities. If college funding is the main concern, start with education planning. If flexibility is the main concern, review taxable options. If the goal is to teach long-term investing and seed a retirement-style balance before the child has earned income, the Trump Account may serve that purpose well.

In Conclusion

Trump Accounts may become a useful new planning tool for children and grandchildren because they combine early investing, possible government seed money, no earned-income requirement during the growth period, and low-cost index investment rules.

The account’s most important value may be behavioral. It can help a child see that wealth is built over time through contributions, ownership, and patience. For families that want the next generation to understand money rather than simply receive it, that lesson may matter just as much as the account balance.

However, the account should still be treated as one component of a coordinated plan. A 529 plan may remain the stronger education vehicle. A custodial account may provide broader flexibility. A Roth IRA may become attractive once the child has earned income. Trusts, beneficiary design, insurance, and estate documents still carry the larger family transfer strategy. The Trump Account’s value depends on how well it fits among those pieces.

If you’re considering how to fund children or grandchildren, review the full structure before choosing an account. WealthGen Advisors can help compare the options, model the tax and estate implications, and build a plan that connects today’s contribution decision with the family’s long-term wealth goals. All you have to do to get started is to click the button below.

Sources

1. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2023, https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/2024-economic-well-being-of-us-households-in-2023-retirement-investments.htm

2. Congress.gov, Public Law 119-21, One Big Beautiful Bill Act, https://www.congress.gov/119/plaws/publ21/PLAW-119publ21.pdf

3. IRS, Notice 2025-68, Notice of Intent to Issue Regulations With Respect to Section 530A Trump Accounts, https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-25-68.pdf

4. IRS, Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education, https://www.irs.gov/publications/p970

5. IRS, Publication 590-A, Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements, https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590a

6. IRS, Topic No. 557, Additional Tax on Early Distributions From Traditional and Roth IRAs, https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc557

7. 26 U.S.C. § 529, Qualified Tuition Programs, https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title26-section529&num=0&edition=prelim

Disclosures

Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk, and there can be no assurance that any specific investment or strategy will be suitable or profitable for a client’s portfolio. All investment strategies have the potential for profit or loss. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date, but we do not guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the author/presenter as of the date of publication and are subject to change and do not constitute personalized investment advice.

A professional advisor should be consulted before implementing any investment strategy. WealthGen Advisors does not represent, warranty, or imply that the services or methods of analysis employed by the Firm can or will predict future results, successfully identify market tops or bottoms, or insulate clients from losses due to market corrections or declines. Investments are subject to market risks and potential loss of principal invested, and all investment strategies likewise have the potential for profit or loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Please note: While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, we are not Certified Public Accountants (CPAs). The information in this article is intended for informational and educational purposes only and should not be interpreted as tax advice. It is crucial to consult with a CPA, tax professional or estate attorney to discuss your personal situation.

Author

  • A Florida native, and full-time Sarasota resident, Ken founded WealthGen Advisors, LLC after spending more than fourteen years in the financial advisory industry. Ken holds multiple industry designations, as well as a master's degree in Financial Planning. Prior to founding WealthGen Advisors, Ken spent almost a decade in New York and then Texas as Vice President at The Capital Group, a $2T global investment manager serving institutional clients and pension funds.

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