Trump Accounts Are Coming: What Families Should Know

Trump Accounts Are Coming: What Families Should Know

July 02, 2026

Trump Accounts officially open for contributions on July 4, 2026. We wanted to send a quick note covering what we think matters most for families with kids or grandkids in the eligible age range.

The most concrete piece first: if you have a child or grandchild born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028, the federal government will put a one-time $1,000 contribution into their Trump Accounts, regardless of family income. A parent or guardian claims it by filing IRS Form 4547. I just completed the form online, and it took less than 10 minutes.  There is a lot of information available at TrumpAccounts.gov - Trump Accounts - Jumpstarting the American Dream - including how to open an account and the link to IRS Form 4547.

Trump accounts can be opened for any child under the age of 18.  Only those born in 2025 or later would be eligible for the $1,000 government contribution.  The age-based deadline runs through December 31 of the year the child turns 17.1,2,3

A Few Things Worth Knowing

  • The $1,000 federal seed is available only to children born in 2025 through 2028. Older children can still open Trump Accounts, but they will not receive the federal contribution.

  • The Treasury has announced that dozens of companies are prepared to match their employee contributions to their children’s accounts in various ways. Some companies have stepped up and said they are going to contribute to the accounts, and some others have said they will make contributions as part of their philanthropic initiatives. Taken together, these additional contributions may start to add up.4,5

  • Anyone (parents, grandparents, family friends, or the child themselves) can contribute with the total contributions capped at $5,000 per child per year. Of that, employers can fill up to $2,500. The cap will be inflation-indexed starting in 2027.6

How Trump Accounts Compare

For families already using a 529, the question we get most often is: Should we add Trump Accounts, replace the 529, or skip it entirely?

The short answer: If education funding is your primary goal, consider a 529 account because of its tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals for qualifying education expenses. If the goal is to focus on the future with flexibility beyond college and/or to give kids a boost for future retirement savings, the Trump Accounts may play a role.7  

A Few Cautions Worth Mentioning

State tax treatment is uneven. California, for example, does not currently conform to the federal rules, which can change the math meaningfully at the state level. The IRS is also still finalizing certain regulations, including gift tax treatment for grandparent contributions.2

While we can provide insights on how a Trump Account fits in your overall finances, we would encourage you to speak to your tax, legal, or accounting professional to iron out all the details regarding any tax implications.  Also, please understand that since these accounts are new, there may be some changes on the application of tax rules.  Our current information is based on IRS guidance, but guidance can change once rules start being applied in practice.

Recordkeeping matters more than it might appear. Personal contributions are after-tax; the federal seed, employer matches, and charitable contributions are pre-tax. They are taxed differently when withdrawn, and clean records from day one will keep things simple later.

If you have a child or grandchild who could benefit, or you simply want to make sense of how this fits into what you already have in place, let’s talk. The decision is more individualized than it might appear, and the time to think it through is before you contribute, not after.

1. Investor.gov, April 2026.

2. BrooklynFi.com, February 20, 2026.

3. GovInfo.gov (Federal Register), March 9, 2026.

4. BusinessWire.com, January 29, 2026.

5. APNews.com, December 2, 2025.

6. IRS.gov, December 2, 2025. 

7. PKFOD.com, April 2026.

This material was developed and produced by FMG Suite to provide information on a topic that may be of interest. FMG Suite is not affiliated with the named broker-dealer, state- or SEC-registered investment advisory firm.