Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - Income Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter Subchapter F— - Exempt Organizations › Part PART IX— - TRUMP ACCOUNTS › § 530A
Creates a special kind of IRA called a Trump account for people who have not yet turned 18. The account is not a Roth IRA and must be named a Trump account when opened. It can be set up by the Secretary or in the United States for an eligible child and may be started with a qualified rollover. No contributions are allowed until 12 months after the law is enacted. Contributions made before the year the child turns 18 are limited to $5,000 per calendar year, except for qualified rollovers, certain charity or government “general funding” contributions, or contributions under section 6434. No tax deduction is allowed for contributions made before the year the child turns 18. After 2027, the $5,000 limit will be adjusted for inflation and rounded down to the nearest $100. Money generally cannot be taken out before the first day of the calendar year in which the child turns 18. Exceptions include qualified rollovers and one special ABLE rollover if the transfer is made in the calendar year the beneficiary turns 17 and it moves the entire balance. Investments for the account before that date are limited to eligible mutual funds or ETFs that track a qualified index, use no leverage, and charge no more than 0.1 percent in annual fees; a qualified index includes the S&P 500 or similar mainly U.S. company indexes with regulated futures trading. If a contribution exceeds the $5,000 limit, the excess can be distributed without being counted as income, but a tax equal to 100 percent of the net income tied to that excess is added. If the child dies before turning 18, the Trump account stops being a Trump account and the fair market value (minus the investment in the contract) is included in the income of the person who gets the account or in the child’s final year if the estate gets it. The Secretary will choose trustees based on reliability, customer service, and cost. Trustees must report contributions, distributions, account value, and other details to the Secretary and the beneficiary, and must file a special report within 30 days after any qualified rollover; reporting ends after the calendar year the beneficiary turns 17. Some normal IRA rules do not apply to Trump accounts while the beneficiary is under 18.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 530A
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73