The post Trump Says New Accounts Will Make Kids ‘Very Rich.’ We Ran The Numbers. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
President Trump rang the opening bells of the NYSE and NASDAQ from the Oval Office on July 4, 2026, officially launching Trump Accounts. Two days later, he told reporters: “If we have a good market like we do now, they’re going to become actually very rich. They’ll have hundreds of thousands of dollars. Think of that.” As of launch, more than 6 million accounts have been opened, and 1.4 million children will receive the $1,000 federal pilot contribution.
The claim is achievable but depends on assumptions most families will not meet. Here is what the math actually says.
Created under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed July 4, 2025, Trump Accounts (also called 530A accounts) are a form of traditional IRA opened on behalf of a child. Any US citizen under age 18 with a Social Security number is eligible. Contributions go in with after-tax dollars, earnings grow tax-deferred, and withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income.
Money must be invested in mutual funds or ETFs tracking the S&P 500 or another primarily US equity index, with expense ratios capped at 0.10%. The default fund is the State Street SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:SPYM), with a 0.02% expense ratio. Parents open one through IRS Form 4547 or the TrumpAccounts.gov app, and each child can have only one.
The federal government is depositing a one-time $1,000 pilot contribution for US citizens born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028, and it does not count against the annual contribution limit. On July 4, the administration seeded over 500,000 eligible children’s accounts.
Private money is stacking on top. The Michael & Susan Dell Foundation committed $6.25 billion to give $250 to every child under age 11 in qualifying ZIP codes, up to 25 million children. Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) committed $250 million, and the Dalio Foundation is contributing $250 for select children in Connecticut. In NYC alone, roughly 754,200 children are eligible for the Dell grant, worth $188.5 million. Philanthropic and government contributions do not count toward the annual cap.
All figures below are projections from TrumpAccounts.gov using the S&P 500’s historical average return of roughly 10% annually. For context, the S&P 500 has returned about 253% over the past ten years, but future returns are not guaranteed.
Only out-of-pocket contributions from parents and family create tax basis. The government’s $1,000 seed, employer contributions, and nonprofit contributions are fully taxable on withdrawal, along with every dollar of earnings.
The example from the account rules: an account funded with $4,000 from parents and $1,000 from the government grows to $40,000. Only $4,000 comes out tax-free. The remaining $36,000 is fully taxable as ordinary income. Contributions are not tax-deductible, and withdrawals before age 59 and a half trigger income tax plus a 10% penalty, with exceptions for education and first-time home purchases.
For education funding, a 529 plan wins because qualified education withdrawals are completely tax-free. For a teenager with a paycheck, a custodial Roth IRA wins with tax-free growth, tax-free qualified withdrawals, a $7,500 contribution limit, and broader investment choices. Against doing nothing, Trump Accounts win if the child qualifies for the federal $1,000 or the Dell $250.
One overlooked risk, per J.P. Morgan Wealth Management: “Parents and guardians should assess their comfort level with the child gaining full control of the funds at age 18, this involves predicting whether their newborn will be ready to manage what could be a five- or six-figure sum in their teen years.”
Trump’s $13 million figure is technically achievable with 18 straight years of $5,000 contributions, roughly historical market returns, and a child who leaves the account untouched until 55. The realistic middle scenario produces meaningful money at 18 and genuine retirement wealth at 55 if left alone.
If your child qualifies for the federal $1,000 or the Dell $250, open the account now. Free money compounding for 18 years is always worth claiming.
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The post Trump Says New Accounts Will Make Kids ‘Very Rich.’ We Ran The Numbers. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

