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| https://www.trumpaccounts.gov/ |
New Section 530A basically allows new accounts that operate much like a traditional IRA only they are for kids under age 18 and have restrictions on what they can invest in. Up to $5,000 can be contributed to the account annually (this amount is adjusted for inflation starting in 2028) until the year of the child's 17th birthday. Of this amount, up to $2,500 can be contributed by an employer (per employee per year rather than per employee Trump Account) if the employer creates this employee benefit, written, per guidance to be issued by the IRS. The $2,500 is tax free to the employee (Section 128).
For a baby born in 2025 through 2028, the government will put $1,000 into the account if the baby is a US citizen and has an SSN and the parent or other relative makes the election. This doesn't count towards the maximum $5,000 contribution per year. The $1,000 is treated as a tax refund so not taxable.
No distributions are allowed until the year the child turns 18 but the goal is for the child to learn about future value, savings and perhaps a bit about taxes, and let the money continue to grow. The child can start contributing via IRA rules once working and keeping the account. If disciplined, to keep the account and not pull it out for a new car or big party, the account could grow tremendously. For example, parents starting one in 2026 (contributions can't start until 7/4/26) for their 3-year old child, contributing $5,000 per year until age 17 (15 contributions), assuming a 5% rate of return will have almost $108,000 at that time. If no further contributions, when the child is 60, the balance would be about $837,000.
You need to track basis in the account and if a state doesn't conform, also track state tax basis in the account. If would be a lot simpler if states conform.
For more information:
- Website where apparently by July 2026 you can elect to set up an account - https://www.trumpaccounts.gov/
- Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s)
1. Add a provision similar to Section 529(c)(2)(A)(i) that contributions to the account on behalf of any designated beneficiary is treated as a completed gift to that beneficiary which is NOT a future interest in property to make it clear that the gift can be exempt from reporting and gift tax under the $19,000 annual gift exclusion.
2. Encourage contributions and people not forgetting about the accounts by allowing tax refunds to be directed to the account(s).
3. Add more than a 10% withdrawal penalty to discourage 18-year-olds from emptying the account at age 18 or soon thereafter. Provide an incentive to encourage them to convert the account to a traditional IRA and continue making contributions; the incentive might be another $1,000 into the account at age 21.
4. Encourage states to conform to the OBBBA Trump Account provisions to simplify tracking basis in the account and for conformity on annual tax effects.
5. Require trustees to make contact with beneficiaries (and parents until beneficiaries turn 18) because it is possible beneficiaries will forget about the account and the trustee will end up sending it to the state as unclaimed property at some point in the future. This regular contact would ideally include some financial literacy tips.
What do you think?





