The Trump administration’s signature children’s investment initiative reached a new milestone when the Trump Accounts mobile app went live on May 28, 2026.
The app launched on the Apple App Store and Google Play, giving families the primary digital tool for managing their children’s 530A investment accounts.
The rollout arrives roughly five weeks before July 4, when the U.S. Treasury plans to deposit $1,000 into accounts for qualifying children.
Millions of American families have already completed their enrollment paperwork through IRS Form 4547, leaving the mobile app as the missing piece of the program’s consumer-facing infrastructure.
However, downloading the app does not provide immediate access to a fully operational account because the Treasury is activating accounts in phases.
How the Trump Accounts app works
The U.S. Department of the Treasury tapped Bank of New York Mellon as the federal financial agent for managing initial Trump Accounts and partnered with Robinhood as the brokerage and initial trustee.
The BNY-Robinhood arrangement was first announced in a Treasury press release dated April 6, 2026, with BNY partnering with Robinhood to deliver the white-label app developed in conjunction with the National Design Studio.
The initial app setup requires families to enter the same email address they used when filing their account application through IRS Form 4547 on TrumpAccounts.gov.
The Trump Accounts app delivers a simple, secure way for households to begin engaging with a program designed to build long-term financial strength from day one.
A verification code is sent to that email, and after confirming it, users add a phone number, complete a phone verification step, and create a password, CNBC reported.
After completing those preliminary steps on May 28, at least one reporter testing the live app encountered a holding screen about the phased account rollout.
The in-app message explained that Trump Accounts were being activated in waves over the coming weeks and directed users to watch for an email invitation.
All legitimate communication from the Treasury will arrive from [email protected], and the department issued a clear warning about potential fraud.
Any unsolicited call or text message regarding Trump Account activation is likely a scam, the Treasury stated, because the agency will never contact families by phone or text.
Who qualifies, and how do Trump Accounts get funded?
Trump Accounts, formally designated as Section 530A accounts under the Internal Revenue Code, are open to every U.S. child under 18 with a valid Social Security number.
Parents or legal guardians can open and manage accounts on behalf of their children by completing IRS Form 4547 on TrumpAccounts.gov or by including it with their 2025 tax return.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed on July 4, 2025, created a pilot program granting a $1,000 federal deposit to children born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028.
That deposit is scheduled to arrive in eligible accounts as early as July 4, 2026, and will be invested in a diversified U.S. stock index fund.
Families, friends, employers, and charitable organizations can contribute to a child’s Trump Account, with combined annual contributions capped at $5,000 in total from all sources.
No personal contributions are required to open an account or receive the $1,000 pilot deposit, meaning eligible families can participate at zero cost, the Treasury confirmed.
Several major corporations, including Uber, Dell, and SoFi Technologies, have committed to matching the federal deposit.
Bank of America told employees it would match the government’s $1,000 seed contribution for eligible workers who open 530A accounts for their children.
Parents can open and manage Trump Accounts on behalf of their children by completing IRS Form 4547 on TrumpAccounts.gov.
How Trump Account funds grow, and when children can access the money
The default investment at launch will be an S&P 500 exchange-traded fund, providing broad exposure to U.S. equities while keeping management costs low for families.
Under Section 530A of the Internal Revenue Code, eligible investments must be mutual funds or ETFs that track a broad U.S. equity index, carry no leverage, and charge annual fees of 0.10% or less.
Account holders cannot withdraw funds before turning 18, except in limited circumstances outlined in the legislation, such as rolling the balance into a 530A account at another brokerage.
Other exceptions include certain rollovers to an ABLE account in the year the child turns 17, or distributions following the account holder’s death, CBS News confirmed.
No distributions are permitted before age 18, and between ages 18 and 25, cumulative distributions cannot exceed half the account balance as of the beneficiary’s 18th birthday, with withdrawals for qualified expenses (education, first-home purchase, small-business launch) taxed at ordinary income.
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Non-qualified withdrawals before age 30 are taxed as ordinary income and subject to a 10% penalty.
After that window, the remaining balance is subject to traditional IRA rules, meaning distributions before age 59-and-a-half would be subject to income taxes and a 10% early withdrawal penalty.
The official TrumpAccounts.gov site projects the initial $1,000 could grow to roughly $6,000 by age 18 and approximately $243,000 by age 55 with no additional contributions, according to CNBC.
Those estimates rely on the S&P 500’s historical average annual return exceeding 10%, which includes extended periods of significant market volatility and decline.
What should families with Trump Accounts expect in the coming weeks?
For families who downloaded the app this week, the immediate experience is less about investing and more about waiting.
The phased activation, the July 4 deposit timeline, and the debate over what $1,000 can realistically become over five decades all sit on the same unresolved question: whether the program delivers the long-term wealth-building outcomes its architects have promoted, or something more modest.
Related: Trump accounts may be Trojan horse for Social Security reform