Updated June 2026

Trump Account vs 529 vs Custodial Roth IRA

Same dollars, three very different tax outcomes. Compare projected after-tax value for college or retirement — then see the full rules side by side.

After-tax value comparison

Goal: pay for college at 18

$0
529 plan (tax-free)
$0
Trump Account*
$0
Custodial Roth IRA*

Goal: retirement at 59½ (no withdrawals at 18)

$0
Custodial Roth IRA (tax-free)
$0
Trump Account*
$0
529 (non-qualified)*
*Model assumptions: identical contributions in each account from 2026 (or birth year, if later) through age 17; Trump Account includes the $1,000 federal seed for 2025–2028 births. College scenario: 529 withdrawals are tax-free for qualified expenses; Trump Account and Roth earnings used for college are taxed as ordinary income at your selected rate (the 10% early-withdrawal penalty is waived for qualified higher-education expenses); contributions/basis come out tax-free. Retirement scenario: Roth withdrawals are tax-free; Trump Account earnings, seed, and any pre-tax amounts are taxed at your selected rate; the 529 column assumes a non-qualified withdrawal (earnings taxed + 10% penalty) and ignores the limited 529-to-Roth rollover option. A custodial Roth IRA legally requires the child to have earned income — most young children don't qualify. Educational estimates only, not advice.
Advertisement

Full rules comparison

FeatureTrump Account529 PlanCustodial Roth IRA
Free government money$1,000 federal seed (U.S. citizens born 2025–2028)None federal; some states offer small seed/match programsNone
Annual limit$5,000/yr aggregate (indexed after 2027); employer up to $2,500 within capEffectively very high — up to gift-tax limits; 5-year front-loading of ~$95k allowedIRA limit ($7,000 in 2026) — but only up to the child's earned income
Earned income required?NoNoYes — the child must have legitimate wages
Tax on growthTax-deferred; earnings taxed as ordinary income at withdrawalTax-free for qualified education expensesTax-free at 59½ (and contributions withdrawable anytime)
Investment choicesRestricted: low-cost U.S. equity index funds (e.g., S&P 500)Plan menu incl. target-date funds, bondsNearly anything
Access before 18Locked (rare exceptions)Anytime for educationContributions anytime
Use at 18 for collegeAllowed, but earnings taxedTax-freePenalty waived for education; earnings taxed
Financial aid (FAFSA)Retirement-type asset — generally favorable treatment expected (guidance pending)Parent asset — counted at up to 5.64%Retirement asset — not counted
Best forFree $1,000 + simple long-horizon investing for any kidFamilies confident the money is for educationKids with real earned income (jobs, modeling, family business)

So which should you actually use?

For most families this isn't either/or. The practical hierarchy looks like this:

Model your own numbers with the Trump Account growth calculator, or check the $1,000 eligibility rules.

Advertisement