Updated June 2026

Trump Account vs Savings Account vs Custodial (UTMA)

Three common places to stash money for a kid — very different growth, taxes, and rules. Here's how they stack up.

Quick comparison

FeatureTrump AccountHigh-Yield SavingsCustodial (UTMA/UGMA)
Typical growthStock-market returns (S&P 500 index)~4% interest (and falling when rates drop)Market returns — you choose investments
Free government money$1,000 seed (born 2025–2028)NoneNone
Taxes on growthTax-deferred; taxed as ordinary income at withdrawalInterest taxed every year"Kiddie tax" — some gains taxed yearly at parent's rate
Annual limit$5,000 (+$2,500 employer within it)NoneNone (large gifts may trigger gift tax)
Access before 18LockedAnytimeFor the child's benefit only
Who controls it at 18The child (becomes a traditional IRA)You (it's your account)The child gets full control
Best forLong-horizon growth + the free $1,000Short-term savings you may need soonFlexible investing without the $5k cap
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Which one should you use?

The Trump Account's growth advantage over a savings account is dramatic over 18 years — stock-index compounding versus ~4% interest. Model the difference in the calculator.

The savings-account trap

A savings account feels safe, and for short-term money it is. But for an 18-year horizon, ~4% interest barely outpaces inflation — and that 4% drops whenever the Fed cuts rates. The Trump Account's S&P 500 index exposure has historically returned far more over long periods (with more ups and downs along the way). For money your child won't touch until adulthood, that volatility is a feature, not a bug — there's time to ride it out.

This is general education, not investment advice. All investing carries risk, including loss of principal; past market returns don't guarantee future results.
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