Trump Accounts: A Complete Guide to Retirement Savings for Children

We’re approaching a significant milestone in the history of financial planning. July 4th, 2026, marks the one-year anniversary of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. This presents a unique planning opportunity that many families are just beginning to understand: Trump Accounts.

If you’re a parent or grandparent thinking about your children’s financial future, or if you’ve reached a point where you want to practice legacy planning with a “warm hand” instead of waiting until you’re gone, Trump Accounts offer an entirely new approach to retirement savings for minors.

The timing couldn’t be more relevant. Many families who have achieved financial independence are now looking beyond their own retirement security toward setting up the next generation for success. Trump Accounts offer something that hasn’t existed before. A way to start retirement savings for children without the traditional barriers that have limited options in the past.

What Are Trump Accounts and How Do They Work?

Trump Accounts are a result of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed into law on July 4th, 2025. While the full economic impact of this legislation is still unfolding amid ongoing global conflicts that are affecting oil prices and inflation, the tax benefits have already begun helping many families. Think of Trump Accounts as traditional IRAs specifically designed for minor children. But they come with some important differences that make them accessible in ways that traditional retirement accounts are not.

The fundamental concept is straightforward. Trump Accounts allow you to make tax-deferred investments on behalf of children under 18, regardless of whether they have earned income. This removes the biggest barrier that has historically prevented families from starting retirement savings for children early. Traditional and Roth IRAs require earned income, so most young children can’t participate. Trump Accounts change that equation entirely.

The money you contribute grows tax-deferred, similar to a traditional IRA, but with some unique features. Individual/family contributions are made with after-tax dollars, similar to non-deductible IRA contributions. The account remains under custodial management until the beneficiary reaches 18 years old. At that point it converts to a traditional IRA in their name.

Setting Up Child Retirement Accounts: Rules and Requirements

Understanding the rules for Trump Accounts is essential before you decide whether they fit into your family’s financial strategy. The beneficiary must be under 18 years old and have a valid Social Security number. Only parents or legal guardians can open and manage these accounts as custodians. Grandparents, family members, and friends can contribute to existing accounts.

One important limitation: there can only be one Trump account per beneficiary. Unlike 529 plans, which allow multiple accounts for the same child, Trump Accounts follow a one-per-person rule. This means coordination becomes important if multiple family members want to contribute.

The contribution structure offers some interesting opportunities. The total annual contribution limit for 2026 is $5,000 per beneficiary. However, there’s an additional opportunity through employer contributions. If you’re a business owner or your employer participates in the program, up to $2,500 can be contributed on behalf of an employee’s Trump Account. That contribution counts toward the $5,000 total limit. This means you could potentially contribute $2,500 that is tax-deductible for the business, plus another $2,500 from personal after-tax income.

Several major companies have already committed to offering Trump account contributions as employee benefits. There are roughly 60 companies that have pledged to make contributions on behalf of their employees or employees’ beneficiaries. These include:

  • Bank of America
  • BNY Mellon
  • Schwab
  • BlackRock
  • Chase
  • Wells Fargo
  • Broadcom
  • Coinbase
  • IBM
  • Dell
  • NVIDIA

There’s also a special “pilot contribution” opportunity. The U.S. Treasury Department will provide $1,000 in seed funding for Trump Accounts opened for children born between 2025 and 2028. This free money doesn’t count against your $5,000 annual contribution limit, making it an attractive starting point for eligible families.

Investment Options for Trump Investment Accounts

The investment choices for Trump investment accounts are deliberately simple and conservative. You won’t find cryptocurrency options, individual stocks, or complex investment vehicles. Instead, Trump investment accounts are restricted to broad-based index funds and ETFs that focus primarily or exclusively on U.S. equities. While this might seem limiting, it actually aligns well with long-term wealth-building strategies.  Think of time in the market as opposed to timing the market.

For most families just getting started with long-term investing, sophisticated investment options aren’t necessary. The power of Trump Accounts lies in time and compounding, not complex investment strategies. Having decades for money to grow in broad market index funds has historically been one of the most reliable wealth-building approaches available.

BNY Mellon will initially manage the accounts through its infrastructure, while Robinhood will handle account custody. While you won’t be able to open Trump Accounts directly through traditional brokerages like Schwab or Fidelity initially, these options will likely become available as the program matures and compliance requirements are established.

Understanding Liquidity and Long-Term Implications

One of the most important aspects of Trump Accounts is understanding when and how funds become accessible. There is no liquidity until the beneficiary reaches 18 years old (or 21 in some states, depending on the age of majority). This is a significant consideration that differentiates Trump Accounts from other savings options.

Once the beneficiary reaches the age of majority, the Trump account automatically converts to a traditional IRA in their name. At this point, traditional IRA rules apply. This includes the 10% early withdrawal penalty for distributions before age 59½, as well as ordinary income taxes on any growth. The original after-tax contributions can be withdrawn without additional taxes, but tracking this basis becomes crucial for tax purposes.

There are some exceptions to the early withdrawal penalties, similar to traditional IRAs. Qualified education expenses, first-time home purchases, and certain hardship situations, such as disability or unemployment, may allow penalty-free withdrawals. However, ordinary income taxes would still apply to the growth portion.

One unique feature is the option to roll Trump account funds into an ABLE account when the beneficiary turns 17, if the child has a qualifying disability. ABLE accounts allow individuals with disabilities to save money without affecting their eligibility for federal benefits like Supplemental Security Income. This option provides important protection for families dealing with special needs planning.

Trump Accounts vs Other Retirement Savings for Children Options

When you evaluate retirement savings strategies for children, you need to consider Trump Accounts alongside other established options. The most popular alternative is the 529 education savings plan, which offers some significant advantages that Trump Accounts cannot match.

529 plans provide state income tax deductions in many states, something Trump Accounts do not offer. The money grows tax-free, and when used for qualified education expenses, distributions are completely tax-free. Recent changes have expanded 529 flexibility, allowing up to $20,000 annually for K-12 private school expenses and enabling 529-to-Roth IRA rollovers under specific conditions.

The 529-to-Roth IRA rollover option is particularly powerful. After a 529 account has remained open for 15 years, you can roll up to $35,000 into a Roth IRA for the beneficiary over time, subject to annual IRA contribution limits. This provides a tax-free path to retirement savings that Trump Accounts cannot match, since conversions from Trump Accounts to Roth IRAs would be taxable events.

Custodial brokerage accounts (UTMA/UGMA accounts) offer another alternative with complete investment flexibility and no contribution limits beyond annual gift tax thresholds. These accounts don’t provide tax-deferred growth. They offer capital gains tax treatment rather than ordinary income tax treatment, and can be used for any purpose without penalties. The trade-off is that the child gains full control at 18 or 21, which may or may not align with your comfort level.

For families with children who have earned income, Roth IRAs remain an excellent option. A working teenager can contribute to a Roth IRA and potentially receive decades of tax-free growth. The combination of a Roth IRA for earned income plus a Trump account for additional savings could provide a powerful one-two punch for families with the resources to fund both.

Comparing Retirement Savings for Children Strategies: A Prioritization Framework

When deciding how to prioritize different retirement savings options for children, consider your family’s specific goals and circumstances. If education funding is a primary concern, 529 plans should typically be the first option. The tax advantages, flexibility for K-12 expenses, and the 529-to-Roth IRA rollover option make them superior for most families focused on education costs.  Additionally, you can transfer an unused 529 to that adult child, who can ultimately use it for a future child’s education expenses. 

For families who have already addressed education funding or have additional resources, custodial brokerage accounts often offer more flexibility than Trump Accounts. The ability to use funds for any purpose without penalties, combined with more favorable capital gains tax treatment, makes custodial accounts attractive for families comfortable with transferring control to their children at the age of majority. 

Trump Accounts might make the most sense as a third-tier option, particularly for families with children born between 2025 and 2028 who can take advantage of the $1,000 pilot funding. The accounts also become more attractive if your employer offers contribution matching or if you’re a business owner who can take advantage of the tax-deductible employer contribution option.

One alternative approach that deserves consideration is to overfund your own taxable brokerage account for the purpose of using it for lifetime gifting and legacy purposes. This strategy maintains your control over the assets while providing flexibility to make gifts when your children or grandchildren actually need financial support, whether for

  • Education
  • Home purchases
  • Business ventures
  • Other life goals 

When you pass away, those assets can receive a step-up in cost basis, making it one of the most powerful legacy buckets available. 

Tax Considerations and the Kiddie Tax Impact

Understanding the tax implications of Trump Accounts requires familiarity with “kiddie tax” rules, which can significantly impact the effectiveness of certain strategies. The kiddie tax applies to the unearned income of children under 18 (or to full-time students under 24 who don’t provide more than half of their own support).

For 2026, the first $1,350 of unearned income is tax-free. The next $1,350 is taxed at the child’s rate (likely very low). Any unearned income above $2,700 is taxed at the parents’ marginal tax rate. This becomes particularly relevant when considering Roth conversion strategies once Trump Accounts convert to traditional IRAs.

Many online discussions suggest that converting funds from a Trump account into Roth IRAs after age 18 represents a significant planning opportunity. However, the kiddie tax rules can make this strategy less attractive than it initially appears. If the beneficiary still qualifies as a dependent on their parents’ tax return, the parents’ higher marginal tax rates could apply to large Roth conversions instead of the child’s lower rates.

More effective conversion opportunities may arise after the child graduates from college and begins working independently. They will not be subject to kiddie tax rules and can take advantage of their own lower tax brackets. However, at that point, the decision belongs to the child, not the parents who originally funded the account. 

Are Trump Accounts Right for Your Family?

Trump Accounts represent a new tool in the family financial planning toolkit. Still, they’re not necessarily the best tool for every situation. They work best for families who have already addressed their primary financial goals:

  • Retirement security
  • Education funding for their children
  • Other immediate financial priorities

The accounts make the most sense when viewed as part of a comprehensive approach to lifetime legacy planning rather than as a standalone solution.

If you’re in a position where you’ve achieved financial independence and are looking for additional ways to benefit your children or grandchildren, Trump Accounts can play a role, particularly if you can take advantage of the pilot funding or employer contribution opportunities.

However, liquidity restrictions, ordinary-income tax treatment, and limited investment options make Trump Accounts less flexible than alternatives such as 529 plans or custodial brokerage accounts. The conversion to a traditional IRA at age 18 does provide some planning opportunities. These need to be weighed against the immediate benefits available through other savings vehicles.

For most families, a prioritized approach makes sense:

  • 529 plans for education funding
  • Roth IRAs for children with earned income
  • Consideration of Trump Accounts or
  • Custodial brokerage accounts for additional savings goals

The key is to understand how each option fits into your overall family financial strategy, rather than viewing any single account type as a complete solution.

The introduction of Trump Accounts adds another option to consider. Still, the fundamentals of long-term wealth building remain the same:

  1. Start early
  2. Invest consistently
  3. Give time and compounding the opportunity to work

Whether you choose Trump Accounts, 529 plans, custodial accounts, or a combination of strategies, the most important step is starting with a plan that matches your family’s goals and comfort level.

Need More Guidance?

At Imagine Financial Security, we help individuals over 50 who have at least $1 million saved navigate these complex retirement decisions. If you are looking to

  • Maximize your retirement spending
  • Minimize your lifetime tax bill
  • Worry less about money

You can start by taking our Retirement Readiness Questionnaire on our website at www.imaginefinancialsecurity.com, so we can learn more about how we can help you on your journey to and through retirement.

Not quite ready to take the questionnaire, but want helpful tips and resources? Sign up for our monthly newsletter and/or subscribe to our YouTube channel. This is for general education purposes only and should not be considered as tax, legal, or investment advice.

Kevin Lao

I am the owner and lead financial planner @ IFS. We are an independent firm specializing in retirement planning. I also host The Planning for Retirement Podcast and can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts and other streaming services. I live in Chattanooga, TN with my wife, three boys and two rescue pups. I love to travel, play golf and smoke (and eat) meats.