New tax-advantaged investment accounts for US children officially launch on July 4, with a one-time $1,000 Treasury deposit for babies born between 2025 and 2028 and room for family and employer contributions.
Trump Accounts, a new type of tax-advantaged investment account for American children, officially launch on July 4. Created under the 2025 tax-and-spending law and sometimes called 530A accounts, they function like a traditional individual retirement account for minors, with the child as the legal owner and a parent or guardian acting on their behalf until age 18. The federal government will make a one-time $1,000 pilot contribution for children born from the start of 2025 through the end of 2028, once an account is opened. Beyond that seed money, parents, relatives and others can contribute up to a combined $5,000 a year, with employers able to add up to $2,500 within that cap; the government seed and certain charitable gifts do not count toward the limit. Investments are restricted to low-cost US index funds, and withdrawals are generally barred before age 18. The Treasury says more than five million families have already begun signing up, with roughly 1.4 million children eligible for the seed deposit, and it has launched a dedicated app built with BNY Mellon and Robinhood to manage the accounts.
Key Points
- 1Trump Accounts launch July 4, 2026, as tax-advantaged IRA-style accounts for children.
- 2Children born from 2025 through 2028 receive a one-time $1,000 Treasury seed deposit.
- 3Family and others can contribute up to a combined $5,000 a year, with employers up to $2,500 within that cap.
- 4More than five million families have begun signing up, with about 1.4 million eligible for the seed money.
Why This Matters
The accounts give millions of American children an early, government-funded start on long-term investing, though families must weigh them against 529 plans and other options with different tax and withdrawal rules.
Related Stories
US Hiring Slows Sharply in June as Payrolls Rise Just 57,000
July 4, 2026
Soft Jobs Data Lift US Stocks and Rate-Cut Bets While the Dollar Slides
July 4, 2026
New York Issues Guidance Aimed at Lowering Auto Insurance Premiums
July 4, 2026
Colorado Regulators Say Individual Health Premiums Set to Jump About 28%
July 4, 2026
Daily Intelligence
The PolicyGlobal Daily Brief
Get the top 5 insurance and finance stories every morning, curated and verified by our editorial desk. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
Informational newsletter only. Not financial advice. Disclaimer