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Trump Accounts: The Regulations Treasury Confirmed, What the Rules Still Leave Unanswered, and What Advisors Should Know
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Denise ApplebyGuest Expert: Denise Appleby, Appleby Consulting

Trump Accounts: What the Regulations Confirmed, What the Rules Still Leave Unanswered, and What Advisors Should Know

In this detailed webinar discussion, retirement account expert Denise Appl...

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Discussions & Comments

missy@financialexpertsnetwork.com 2 days 5 hours ago
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

Importance of coordination among family members for contributions to Trump accounts
- Elissa W.

Being able to convert the 529 plan with excess funds. That will be helpful to a current client.
- Sally H.

Great class. Cleared up misinformation I've read/received.
- Mark M.

I didn't know the contribution limits, what was created as a basis, et cetera so all of this was really good information.
- Randall W.

it was all a big learning session. Didn't know these were not like a Roth. More like a TIRA. not quite as great as folks think but savings is savings.
- Robert T.

Think of Trump accounts as setting up IRA accounts for children at birth or soon after.
- Michael D.

missy@financia…

Wed, 05/27/2026 - 09:48

A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

Importance of coordination among family members for contributions to Trump accounts
- Elissa W.

Being able to convert the 529 plan with excess funds. That will be helpful to a current client.
- Sally H.

Great class. Cleared up misinformation I've read/received.
- Mark M.

I didn't know the contribution limits, what was created as a basis, et cetera so all of this was really good information.
- Randall W.

it was all a big learning session. Didn't know these were not like a Roth. More like a TIRA. not quite as great as folks think but savings is savings.
- Robert T.

Think of Trump accounts as setting up IRA accounts for children at birth or soon after.
- Michael D.

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Trump Accounts: What the Regulations Confirmed, What the Rules Still Leave Unanswered, and What Advisors Should Know

In this detailed webinar discussion, retirement account expert Denise Appleby and Financial Experts Network host Tom Dickson explored the rapidly evolving rules surrounding “Trump Accounts,” the new retirement savings vehicle established under recently enacted federal legislation. The session focused on how the accounts function, how they differ from traditional IRAs and 529 plans, the operational and compliance issues advisors must understand, and the planning opportunities these accounts may create for families.

A central theme throughout the session was that Trump Accounts are fundamentally a specialized type of traditional IRA with highly customized rules during a child’s “growth period” before age 18. While much public attention has focused on the government-funded $1,000 “pilot contribution,” the presenters emphasized that the broader planning significance lies in the long-term tax-deferred accumulation potential, annual contribution flexibility, and eventual Roth conversion opportunities.

The webinar also highlighted numerous unresolved issues that remain subject to future IRS and Treasury guidance, including gift tax treatment, FAFSA treatment, operational correction procedures, basis tracking after transfers, and custodian administration rules. Advisors were encouraged to frame conversations carefully with clients, emphasizing that current guidance relies heavily on proposed regulations and IRS Notice 2025-68 rather than finalized rules. 

The presenters repeatedly stressed that Trump Accounts should not be viewed merely as a political initiative or a one-time government subsidy, but rather as a potentially powerful long-term retirement savings structure for children that could materially alter retirement readiness outcomes across generations. 


Key Topics and Expanded Insights

Understanding Trump Accounts and How They Differ From Traditional IRAs

The webinar clarified that Trump Accounts are legally structured as a type of traditional IRA but operate under a distinct statutory framework with separate contribution rules, investment restrictions, and distribution limitations during the child’s growth period.

Key Takeaways

  • Trump Accounts can be established for children who: 
    • Have a valid Social Security number 
    • Are under age 18 as of year-end 
  • Unlike standard IRAs, no earned income is required for contributions. 
  • Individual contributions are never deductible, even though the account itself is tax-deferred. 
  • Contributions made by parents, grandparents, or others create basis inside the account. 

Denise Appleby emphasized that one of the most important distinctions is that children can begin accumulating retirement savings at birth, making Trump Accounts the first widely available federal retirement structure that permits contributions without compensation. 

Planning Implications

This creates potentially significant long-term compounding opportunities. The presenters referenced modeling examples showing that consistent annual contributions combined with later Roth conversion strategies could potentially produce multimillion-dollar tax-free retirement balances over decades. 

Advisor Considerations

Advisors should help families understand that:

  • The primary purpose of these accounts is long-term retirement accumulation. 
  • These are not flexible short-term savings vehicles. 
  • Clients must be comfortable locking assets away until the child reaches age 18. 

Trump Accounts vs. Pilot Contributions: Avoiding a Major Source of Confusion

A major portion of the webinar focused on distinguishing the Trump Account itself from the separate “pilot contribution” program.

Key Takeaways

  • The Trump Account is the retirement account structure itself. 
  • The pilot contribution is merely one possible funding source. 
  • The pilot contribution is a one-time $1,000 government contribution. 
  • Pilot contribution eligibility is narrower than general Trump Account eligibility. 

Eligible pilot contribution recipients must:

  • Be U.S. citizens 
  • Be born between 2025 and 2028 
  • Have a Trump Account established 
  • Have a valid election filed by an authorized individual 

The presenters repeatedly warned that many media reports incorrectly conflate the pilot contribution with the account itself. 

Important Operational Detail

The IRS will not automatically create an account when a pilot contribution election is made. If the account itself has not already been established, Treasury may have nowhere to deposit the funds.

Advisor Planning Opportunity

Advisors working with young families should proactively coordinate:

  • Account setup 
  • Pilot elections 
  • Family contribution strategies 
  • Custodian documentation 

Failure to coordinate properly could delay or disrupt funding.


Contribution Rules and Coordination Challenges

The webinar devoted substantial time to the complexities surrounding contribution coordination.

Five Types of Contributions

The presenters identified five categories of Trump Account funding:

  1. Pilot contributions 
  2. Qualified general contributions 
  3. Employer contributions 
  4. Qualified rollover contributions 
  5. Individual contributions 

Key Takeaways

  • Only employer and individual contributions count toward the annual $5,000 limit. 
  • Charitable or nonprofit contributions generally do not count toward the limit. 
  • Individual contributions may come from parents, grandparents, neighbors, or the child. 
  • Employer contributions are capped at $2,500 per employee annually. 

Common Advisor Trap

Denise Appleby emphasized that excess contribution risk may become a major operational problem because multiple family members may independently contribute without coordination. 

Practical Example

The webinar described a real-world scenario in which:

  • Parents intended to fully fund a Trump Account 
  • Grandparents separately planned contributions 
  • The advisor discovered the overlap only after proactively asking additional questions 

Without coordination, the family could easily exceed the statutory contribution limit.

Advisor Takeaway

Advisors should encourage a formal “family funding conversation” to establish:

  • Who will contribute 
  • How much each party will contribute 
  • Whether employer contributions are involved 
  • Whether charitable funding opportunities apply 

Employer Contributions and Workplace Planning Opportunities

One of the most overlooked planning opportunities discussed involved employer-sponsored Trump Account contributions.

Key Takeaways

  • Employers may contribute up to $2,500 annually per employee. 
  • Contributions are tax-deductible to the employer. 
  • Contributions are not taxable to employees when made. 
  • Employer contributions are subject to nondiscrimination rules. 

Important Distinction

The $2,500 employer limit applies per employee, not per child.

An employee with multiple children still remains subject to a single $2,500 employer contribution cap. 

Strategic Planning Opportunities

The presenters suggested employers could use Trump Account contributions:

  • As recruiting incentives 
  • As retention tools 
  • To differentiate benefit packages 
  • To support employee financial wellness initiatives 

Advisor Implications

Financial advisors serving business owners may eventually incorporate Trump Account employer programs into broader employee benefits planning discussions.


Investment Restrictions During the Growth Period

The webinar highlighted unusually restrictive investment rules governing Trump Accounts prior to age 18.

Permitted Investments

Investments generally must:

  • Track the S&P 500 or broad-based U.S. equity indexes 
  • Be low-cost passive funds 
  • Maintain expense ratios at or below 0.1% 

Prohibited Investments

The presenters noted that:

  • Actively managed funds are prohibited 
  • Sector-specific funds are prohibited 
  • ESG-focused indexes are prohibited 
  • Leveraged and inverse funds are prohibited 
  • Cash positions generally cannot remain indefinitely 

Custodian Responsibilities

Custodians are responsible for:

  • Monitoring investment compliance 
  • Preventing prohibited investments 
  • Correcting ineligible holdings 

Planning Implication

Advisors should view Trump Accounts primarily as long-term passive accumulation vehicles during childhood, rather than active investment management accounts.


Distribution Restrictions and Post-Age-18 Flexibility

One of the most important planning distinctions discussed involved the “growth period” restrictions.

Key Takeaways

  • Distributions generally cannot occur before the year the child reaches age 18. 
  • Exceptions include: 
    • Death 
    • Qualified rollovers 
    • Certain ABLE account rollovers 
    • Excess contribution corrections 

Post-Growth Period Opportunities

Beginning January 1 of the year the child turns 18:

  • Traditional IRA rules largely begin to apply 
  • Roth conversions become permissible 
  • Broader investment flexibility becomes available 
  • Assets may remain tax-deferred indefinitely 

Roth Conversion Planning

The presenters repeatedly highlighted Roth conversions as a potentially powerful long-term planning strategy.

Key observations included:

  • Roth conversions are taxable 
  • The 10% early withdrawal penalty does not apply to Roth conversions 
  • Outside funds may be used to pay conversion taxes 
  • Suitability analysis remains essential 

Practical Advisor Consideration

Advisors may eventually help young adults evaluate:

  • Strategic low-income Roth conversion windows 
  • Early-career tax bracket opportunities 
  • Multi-decade tax-free growth potential 

Basis Tracking and Taxation Complexities

The webinar repeatedly emphasized the importance of basis tracking.

Key Takeaways

  • Individual contributions create basis. 
  • Employer contributions and pilot contributions do not create basis. 
  • Distributions are prorated between taxable and non-taxable amounts. 

Significant Operational Detail

Unlike traditional IRAs, custodians — not taxpayers — are expected to track Trump Account basis. 

Example Presented

The webinar illustrated a scenario involving:

  • $1,000 pilot contribution 
  • Annual parent contributions 
  • Long-term growth producing a six-figure account 

When distributions occur:

  • Parent contribution portions may be recovered tax-free 
  • Earnings and pre-tax contributions remain taxable 

Advisor Takeaway

Advisors should maintain detailed documentation regarding:

  • Source of contributions 
  • Rollovers 
  • Employer funding 
  • Transfer activity 

This may become particularly important when accounts are later transferred into traditional IRAs.


Comparing Trump Accounts to 529 Plans

The presenters repeatedly emphasized that Trump Accounts and 529 plans serve different planning purposes.

Trump Account Advantages

  • Long-term retirement focus 
  • Roth conversion opportunities 
  • No earned income requirement 
  • Tax-deferred growth 

529 Plan Advantages

  • Qualified education withdrawals are tax-free 
  • Greater access flexibility for education expenses 
  • Better short- and medium-term educational planning utility 

Important Distinction

Trump Accounts generally prohibit access before age 18, while 529 plans permit education-related withdrawals throughout childhood and college years. 

Advisor Planning Insight

The presenters suggested many affluent families may ultimately use:

  • 529 plans for education planning 
  • Trump Accounts for retirement accumulation 

Rather than choosing one structure exclusively.


Outstanding Questions and Regulatory Uncertainty

The presenters repeatedly cautioned that many operational details remain unresolved.

Areas Still Awaiting Guidance

  • Gift tax treatment 
  • FAFSA treatment 
  • Excess contribution correction procedures 
  • Transfer mechanics 
  • Successor responsible party rules 
  • State law interaction 
  • Custodian reporting standards 

Important Advisor Caution

Denise Appleby strongly emphasized that advisors should avoid overstating certainty until final regulations are issued. 

Practical Advisor Recommendation

Advisors should:

  • Monitor Treasury guidance closely 
  • Use caution with definitive tax conclusions 
  • Avoid relying solely on media summaries  
  • Frame recommendations as subject to future clarification 

Practical Advisor Takeaways

1. Treat Trump Accounts as Long-Term Retirement Vehicles

These accounts are best suited for:

  • Multi-decade compounding 
  • Long-term retirement accumulation 
  • Future Roth conversion planning 

Rather than short-term savings objectives.


2. Coordinate Contributions Carefully

Advisors should proactively identify:

  • Employer contributions 
  • Grandparent funding 
  • Charitable funding 
  • Parent funding 

To avoid excess contribution problems.


3. Educate Families About Liquidity Restrictions

Many clients may underestimate:

  • The inability to access funds before age 18 
  • Distribution penalties 
  • Operational limitations 

This should be clearly explained during planning conversations.


4. Monitor Roth Conversion Opportunities

The post-age-18 planning window may become one of the most valuable features of these accounts.

Young adults with temporarily low taxable income may have unique opportunities for efficient Roth conversion strategies.


5. Prepare for Ongoing Regulatory Changes

Advisors should expect:

  • Additional IRS notices 
  • Clarifying regulations 
  • Operational guidance 
  • Custodian implementation updates 

Over the coming years.


External Reference Sources

IRS Notice 2025-68
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-25-68.pdf

IRS Form 4547
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-4547

IRS Traditional IRA Guidance
https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/traditional-iras

IRS Roth IRA Guidance
https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/roth-iras

IRS Publication 590-A: Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs)
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-publication-590-a

IRS Publication 590-B: Distributions from Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs)
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-publication-590-b

SECURE 2.0 Act Information
https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/2617

Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) Information
https://studentaid.gov

ABLE Account Information
https://www.ablenrc.org

CFP Board Financial Planning Standards
https://www.cfp.net