Your Child's $1,000 Head Start: What Is a Trump Account?
Key Takeaways
- Trump Accounts provide a $1,000 head start to invest for your child's future
- You manage the account until your child turns 18, when funds can be used for education, a home, or a business
- Trump Accounts are one of four child savings options – and the only one that comes with free money
Saving for your child's future can feel overwhelming, especially if investing has always felt like something other people do. It doesn't have to be someone else's thing, it can be your thing and dramatically help your child get a head start in life.
If the idea of "investing" brings up images of stock tickers and financial jargon, you're not alone. Most people were never taught how. You don't need a lot of money, a financial advisor, or years of experience to get started. You just need to know a few simple options.
What is a Trump Account?
A Trump Account is a new type of investment account for children, created by the federal government in 2025. The money grows in low-cost S&P 500 index funds, which have historically grown much faster than a regular savings account over time.
Here's what you need to know:
- Who qualifies: Any U.S. citizen under 18 with a Social Security number
- Government seed money: $1,000 free deposit for children born Jan. 1, 2025 to Dec. 31, 2028
- Annual contribution limit: Up to $5,000/year from parents, family, or employers. The $1,000 seed doesn't count toward that limit.
- Launch date: Accounts open July 4, 2026. Enroll now by filing IRS Form 4547 or at trumpaccounts.gov.
Savings account vs. investment account: what's the difference?
If investing feels unfamiliar, start here. This is the most important concept to understand before choosing any account for your child.
A savings account holds your cash and pays a small amount of interest, usually around 1-5% per year. An investment account puts your money into the stock market, which has historically grown around 10% per year on average over long periods of time.
|
Savings account |
Trump Account |
|
|
Holds |
Cash |
Stock market funds |
|
Earns |
Small, fixed interest |
Higher growth potential over time |
|
Taxes |
Interest taxed each year |
Growth not taxed until withdrawal |
|
Best for |
Short-term needs |
Long-term goals |
The secret ingredient is compound growth – when your money keeps growing on what it already earned. The longer the money stays invested, the faster it grows.
Here's what $1,000 could become by age 18.¹˒²
- With no extra contributions: ~$8,000
- With max contributions of $5,000/year: up to ~$303,000
Who owns a Trump Account?
You open and manage the account on behalf of your child. You're in full control while they're a minor – your child has no access to the funds until age 18.
At 18, they can withdraw funds for education, a first home, or starting a business with no penalty. Outside of those uses, early withdrawals follow traditional IRA rules, meaning a 10% penalty applies before age 59½. That's by design. The account is built for long-term growth, not short-term spending.
The bottom line: you hold the keys until your child is ready.
How does a Trump Account work?
Trump Accounts are structured like a traditional IRA – a tax-advantaged account that lets your money grow without being taxed each year. If you've never heard of an IRA before, think of it as a special type of account the government created to encourage long-term saving by giving you a tax break.
Here's what that means for your child's account:
- You contribute after-tax dollars – money you've already paid taxes on, so no deduction upfront
- The money grows tax-deferred – no taxes on gains while the money stays in the account
- Investments are limited to S&P 500 or U.S. equity index funds – simple and straightforward, but not customizable
- When your child withdraws funds, the money is taxed as income at their tax rate, which will likely be low
- Qualifying withdrawals at 18 for education, a home, or a business have no early-withdrawal penalty
- Non-qualifying withdrawals before age 59½ carry a 10% penalty
How do Trump Accounts compare to other child savings options?
A Trump Account is one tool, not the whole toolbox. Here's how your options stack up at a glance.
|
Trump Account |
529 Plan |
UTMA/UGMA |
Custodial Roth IRA |
|
|
Free $1,000 from government |
Yes |
No |
No |
No |
|
Contribution limit |
$5,000/yr |
No limit* |
No limit* |
$7,000/yr or earned income |
|
Taxes |
Tax-deferred |
Tax-free |
Taxed annually |
Tax-free |
|
Use of funds |
Education, home, business |
Education only |
Anything |
Retirement |
|
Who owns it |
Parent manages; child at 18 |
Parent; can change beneficiary |
Child fully at 18 or 21 |
Child; retirement rules apply |
|
Income requirement |
None |
None |
None |
Earned income required |
|
Biggest catch |
Must opt in |
Penalty for non-education use |
Child owns fully at 18 |
Needs earned income |
*Gift tax rules apply above $18,000/year per donor
Don't recognize some of these account types? Here's what they all mean.
Trump Account
Best for: Getting started with no deposit from you upfront
- Free $1,000 government deposit to start, plus up to $5,000/year in contributions
- Funds unlock at 18 for education, a home, or a business
- Must opt in – not automatic – and withdrawals are taxed as income
529 College Savings Plan
Best for: Education costs
- A government-approved savings account designed specifically for education expenses
- Money grows and withdraws tax-free for qualified expenses like tuition, books, and room and board
- State tax deductions often available
- Unused funds can roll to a Roth IRA
- Penalty applies for non-education withdrawals
Custodial Brokerage Account (UTMA/UGMA)
Best for: Maximum flexibility
- An investment account you open and manage for your child until they reach adulthood
- No restrictions on how the money is used
- Your child takes full ownership at 18 or 21 depending on your state
- Investment gains are taxed each year
Custodial Roth IRA
Best for: Long-term wealth building
- A retirement savings account opened in your child's name
- One of the most powerful long-term wealth-building tools available
- Money grows completely tax-free for decades
- Child must have earned income to contribute
- Babysitting and part-time jobs count
- Not designed for short-term goals like college or buying a home
Your Action Plan
You don't need to figure it all out today. Pick the step that fits where you are right now.
- Enroll in a Trump Account. Secure the $1,000 government seed money for your child, if applicable. Accounts open July 4, 2026, but you can sign up today through IRS Form 4547 during tax filing or at trumpaccounts.gov.
- Open a 529 plan if education is the goal. The Trump and 529 plan accounts work together and having one doesn't affect the other. In some states contributing to a 529 account has tax advantages.
- Check if your child has earned income. Even small jobs like babysitting count. If they do, a Custodial Roth IRA is worth opening early. The sooner you start, the more decades that money has to grow.
- Choose a UTMA/UGMA if you want no restrictions. Money can be used for anything, which is helpful if your child's future goals are still unclear.
- Take care of your own retirement first. If you're not yet contributing to your own retirement account, start there. A secure financial foundation is a great gift you can give your child.

Financial Beginnings is a national nonprofit dedicated to making money and finance easier to understand through practical, unbiased financial education.
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Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Everyone's financial situation is different, and information may change — always verify details with official sources. Consider speaking with a qualified financial advisor before making any financial decisions.
¹Information from the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Trump Accounts program page: home.treasury.gov/trump-accounts
²Projection estimates from the White House Council of Economic Advisers via official Trump Accounts program materials.
