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Trump Accounts may soon welcome a controversial new asset

5 min read

The federal government is less than two months away from opening Trump Accounts for private contributions on July 4, 2026, and a debate over what should go in them has begun.

White House and Treasury officials have discussed allowing wealthy donors to contribute shares of stock directly into the children’s savings accounts, a shift that could reshape the program.

The accounts currently accept only cash, and every dollar gets invested into low-cost S&P 500 index funds with expense ratios capped at 0.1%. That structure was deliberate, designed to give every eligible child a diversified foothold in the stock market without exposure to any single company’s volatility.

If the rules change, millions of children already enrolled may end up with a completely different type of account. What you need to understand is how this fight over stock donations could affect the money designated for your child.

Stock donations to Trump Accounts could unlock massive tax breaks for donors

Altimeter Capital CEO Brad Gerstner, who helped build the Trump Accounts initiative, posted on X on May 6 voiced openness to allowing share donations. His post responded to a New York Times DealBook report that White House and Treasury officials have discussed expanding the accounts to allow direct stock gifts, CNBC reported.

The appeal to donors centers on how capital gains taxes apply to appreciated stock. When someone donates shares that have gained value, the donor can claim a deduction for the full market value without paying capital gains tax on the appreciation, according to the IRS.

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For top earners facing a combined federal rate of up to 23.8% on long-term capital gains, the savings on a large stock gift would be substantial. Ben Henry-Moreland, a certified financial planner with advisor platform Kitces.com, laid out the mechanics for CNBC. 

If a billionaire wanted to channel $1 billion in appreciated stock into Trump Accounts under the current rules, that donor would first need to sell the shares and pay capital gains taxes before making a cash donation.

Direct stock transfers would eliminate that tax hit and unlock larger philanthropic commitments, Henry-Moreland explained.

How Trump Accounts work and what the stock proposal would change

Trump Accounts, formally designated as Section 530A accounts, were created through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in 2025. Every U.S. child with a Social Security number is eligible, and babies born between 2025 and 2028 qualify for a $1,000 initial deposit from the Treasury.

The accounts function as custodial individual retirement accounts, in which funds remain locked until the child turns 18, after which they are converted to a traditional IRA, with ordinary income tax due on withdrawals.

Private contributions begin on July 4, 2026, with annual deposits capped at $5,000 per child, and BNY Mellon was designated as the financial agent in April 2026, partnering with Robinhood, which will serve as the brokerage and initial trustee.

The initiative has attracted major backing, including a $6.25 billion pledge from Michael and Susan Dell in December 2025 to fund $250 deposits for roughly 25 million children ages 10 and under who live in ZIP codes with a median household income below $150,000, CNBC reported.

Trump Accounts promise long-term savings for children, but proposed stock investments could reshape how families build generational wealth.

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Financial planners warn that stock donations could introduce risk for children

Several financial planners have raised concerns about what stock donations would mean for children holding these accounts over an 18-year time horizon.

Ben Henry-Moreland told CNBC that the index fund requirement exists to prevent speculative single-stock bets inside accounts intended for steady retirement savings accumulation.

“The whole point of the requirement for holding low-fee index funds is to avoid speculative investing in single stocks, and reversing that rule would encourage much more speculative risk-taking in accounts that are meant for steady accumulation of retirement savings,” said Henry-Moreland, CFP, Senior Financial Planning Nerd at Kitces.com.

The risks extend beyond individual accounts because large blocks of donated company stock could turn children’s accounts into concentrated holding vehicles for shares that cannot be sold for years, creating unpredictable consequences for both stock liquidity and children’s long-term outcomes, Moneywise reported.

Gerstner and the White House respond to the stock donation controversy

Gerstner moved to clarify after the DealBook report generated confusion about whether children’s accounts would hold individual shares. In a follow-up post on X, he stated that all money inside Trump Accounts would remain in a free S&P 500 index fund, that there would be no individual stock trading, and that the report was misleading, CNBC reported.

Under this framing, donated stock would be sold by an intermediary and converted to cash before being credited to the account as an index fund investment. 

Congress would still need to amend Section 530A to allow noncash contributions, Henry-Moreland noted. A White House official told CNBC the administration remains open to helping children build wealth, though no formal proposal has been introduced.

What parents and guardians need to know about Trump Accounts

For families who have enrolled children or plan to claim the $1,000 deposit, the practical impact depends on whether donated stock is converted into index fund holdings or whether accounts could eventually hold individual shares. 

Adam Michel, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute, has cautioned that Trump Accounts carry more restrictions and fewer tax benefits than 529 plans and Roth IRAs, CBS News reported. 

Michel noted that the primary use case for these accounts is receiving free money from the government or private donations rather than depositing personal savings. The stock donation debate is unfolding against a broader wave of billionaire giving that has transformed these accounts beyond their original design. 

Gerstner committed to seeding accounts for children under five in Indiana, where roughly 406,000 children fall into that age range, CNBC reported in January 2026. For now, your child’s account will hold diversified index funds, and the $1,000 deposit remains the simplest starting point for families nationwide.

Related: Robinhood and BNY make a bold bet on Trump Accounts

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