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Trump Account vs 529 vs Roth IRA for Kids: Which One Should You Open?
Quick answer: If your baby was born 2025 to 2028, open a Trump Account in July 2026 to grab the free $1,000. If college is your goal, also open a 529. If your kid has a real job (even babysitting that you report), also open a Roth IRA. You can have all three. Skip the UTMA/UGMA unless you have a specific non-college, non-retirement reason.
Starting July 4, 2026, every newborn in the U.S. gets a free $1,000 from the government in a brand-new kind of investment account called a Trump Account. Mom and dad can add more on top. It is the biggest new way to save for kids in a generation.
But it is not the only one. And honestly, for most families, it should sit next to two other accounts that have been around for a while. Here is the plain-English breakdown of all three, so you can pick the right one (or two, or all three) without needing a finance degree.
The three accounts in plain English
Trump Account: free money from the government, grows for the long haul
The new one. Babies born January 2025 through December 2028 get an automatic $1,000 deposit from Treasury starting July 4, 2026. After that, you can add up to $5,000 per year of your own money. If your employer wants to chip in, they can add another $2,500 per year.
The money has to sit in low-cost index funds (basically: a slice of the whole U.S. stock market). You cannot pick individual stocks or fancy funds. That is on purpose, so families do not lose the seed money on bad bets.
Your kid takes control at age 18. They can keep the money invested or take some out (but if they pull it before age 59.5, they pay tax on it plus a 10% penalty, same as a regular retirement account).
One-line summary: Free money to grow for a long time, light tax break, kid takes the wheel at 18.
529 Plan: built for college, biggest tax break if you use it for school
Around since 1996. You put after-tax money in, it grows without being taxed each year, and when you take it out for school costs (tuition, room and board, books, even up to $10,000 of K-12), you pay zero tax on the growth.
Most states also give you a state income tax break on what you put in each year. That is real money in your pocket every April.
You can put in a lot. Most states cap it between $235,000 and $600,000 in total. You stay in control even after your kid grows up.
The catch: if you take the money out and use it for something other than school, you pay tax on the growth plus a 10% penalty. So this is the wrong account if your kid skips college.
One-line summary: The college account. Best tax break of any kid-savings option, but the money is meant for school.
Roth IRA for Kids: only works if your kid has a real job
This one is a sleeper. If your kid earns money from a real job (with a paycheck, or self-employment they report), they can put it in a Roth IRA. The money grows tax-free forever, and they can take out what they put in at any time without penalty.
The catch: they need earned income. A 4-year-old cannot have a Roth IRA. A 14-year-old with a summer job can.
Limit in 2026: $7,000 per year, or their total earned income, whichever is less. So if your kid earns $500 babysitting all summer, they can put up to $500 into a Roth IRA.
Why it is a sleeper: $500 at age 14, growing at 7% a year until age 65, becomes about $16,000. All tax-free. From one summer of babysitting.
One-line summary: The retirement head-start. Only works if your kid earns money. Best tax break in the long run.
Side by side: the cheat sheet
| What you care about | Trump Account | 529 Plan | Roth IRA for Kids |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free money from the government? | Yes, $1,000 (born 2025-2028) | No | No |
| How much can I put in per year? | $5,000 + $2,500 from employer | $19,000 per parent without filing a gift form | $7,000 or what your kid earned, whichever is less |
| Does my kid need a job? | No | No | Yes |
| Best for... | Long-term savings, general | College | Retirement (yes, really) |
| Tax break | Pay tax later, when you take it out | No tax ever, if used for school | No tax ever, in retirement |
| Who controls it? | You until 18, then your kid | You forever | You until 18-21, then your kid |
Which one (or which combo) should you actually open?
Most families do not have to pick just one. The accounts are not in competition. Here is the order that works for almost everyone:
- If your kid qualifies for the $1,000 Trump Account seed, take it. No-brainer. It is free money. It will be worth about $10,000 by their 18th birthday if you do nothing else, just from sitting in the market.
- If college is the goal, put your college dollars in a 529. Better tax break than the Trump Account, plus most states throw in their own break. Use the savings goal calculator to figure out a monthly amount based on your target.
- The summer your kid earns their first $100 from a job, open a Roth IRA. The amounts are small, but starting at 14 instead of 24 is the difference between "comfortable retirement" and "very comfortable retirement." See the first jobs for teens guide for what counts.
- Skip the UTMA/UGMA unless you have a specific reason. No tax break, no free seed, and your kid takes full control at 18 to do whatever they want with it. The other three accounts beat it on every dimension except total flexibility.
How to talk to your kid about it
Money accounts are one of those topics that feel grown-up to kids, which is exactly why they are fun to explain. Use the moment to plant the idea that money can work for you while you sleep. Here is the language by age.
Ages 5 to 7: "Money that babysits more money"
Do not name the accounts. Focus on the magic.
Try this: "If I give you $1 today, you have $1. But if we put that $1 in a special savings box that grows a tiny bit on its own, in a few years you have $2. The grown-up word is interest. It is the money that babysits more money for you while you wait."
For Trump Account specifically: "The government is giving every new baby $1,000 to put in a savings box that grows for a long time. By the time you can drive, it will be worth way more than $1,000."
Ages 8 to 12: "Different boxes for different reasons"
Now you can introduce the idea of multiple accounts.
Try this: "Grown-ups have different savings boxes for different reasons. One is just for college (a 529). One is for when they stop working a long time from now (a Roth IRA). And there is a new one from the government for kids born around now (a Trump Account). The rules are different for each box, but they all do the same trick: the longer the money stays in, the more it grows."
Show them the math. The Rule of 72 calculator takes one number (your growth rate) and tells you how long until your money doubles. At 7% per year, money doubles every 10.3 years. So $1,000 at age 0 turns into $2,000 at 10, $4,000 at 20, $8,000 at 30. Magic, but it is math.
Ages 13+: "This is where your future money comes from"
Now they can handle the real account differences.
Try this: "When you get your first real job, you can open something called a Roth IRA. Whatever you put in, you can take out later (after age 59.5) and never pay tax on what it grew into. If you put $1,000 in this summer when you are 14, and it grows at 7% a year, you will have over $30,000 by retirement. From one summer."
If they have a paystub already, walk through it together. The teen paycheck calculator shows the gross vs net split. The net pay is what counts as earned income for a Roth IRA.
Five questions to ask your kid this week
- "If you got $1,000 today and could not spend it for 18 years, what would you do with it?"
- "Why do you think the government wants every new baby to have a savings account?"
- "What is the difference between saving for next week and saving for 20 years from now?"
- "Pick one: more money today, or twice as much money in 10 years?"
- "What is something a grown-up version of you might want? Should we start saving for it now?"
What is still being figured out
Treasury and the IRS are finalizing the Trump Account rules ahead of the July 2026 launch. The exact list of approved funds, the signup portal at trumpaccounts.gov, and whether the $1,000 deposit is fully automatic or needs you to opt in are all still pending. We will update this post as the rules firm up. For the official line, check the IRS Trump Accounts page.
Sources
- IRS: Trump Accounts
- Treasury/IRS: Trump Accounts Guidance (Notice on upcoming regulations)
- Fidelity: Trump Accounts vs 529s, UTMA/UGMAs, and Roth IRAs
- Vanguard: What to know about new Trump Accounts for kids
- Chase: Trump Accounts for Kids, Key Rules
- Charles Schwab: What to Know About Trump Accounts
- Bankrate: Trump Accounts vs 529s and custodial Roth IRAs
Frequently Asked Questions
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July 4, 2026. If your baby was born between January 2025 and December 2028, they qualify for a free $1,000 from the government. You sign up at trumpaccounts.gov once it goes live. After that you can add up to $5,000 a year of your own money.
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Depends what the money is for. If you are saving for college, the 529 wins. You never pay tax on the growth if you use it for school. The Trump Account is better for everything else, since the money is not locked to college. Most families end up using both.
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Yes. They are separate accounts with separate limits. Most families do: 529 for college, Trump Account for the $1,000 free seed and general long-term savings, Roth IRA later when your kid has a real job.
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No. A Roth IRA needs earned income, which means money from an actual job (W-2 or self-employment). Babysitting, mowing lawns, and tutoring count if you report it. No job means no Roth, but they can still have a 529 and a Trump Account.
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No. The $1,000 is only for babies born 2025 to 2028. Kids born before 2025 can still have a Trump Account, just no free seed. For older kids, focus on a 529 if college is the goal, or a Roth IRA the year they get their first job.
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Trump Account: at 18, control passes to the child. They can keep investing or start taking it out (with tax + a 10% penalty before age 59.5, just like other retirement accounts). 529: you stay in control even after they are 18. Roth IRA: control passes at 18-21 depending on your state.