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BNY and Robinhood Will Help Run ‘Trump Accounts’ for Children
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By The New York Times
Published 1 month ago on
April 7, 2026

President Donald Trump takes questions from reporters after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, March 31, 2026. Bank of New York Mellon and the brokerage Robinhood will work with the federal government to implement the so-called Trump accounts, a tax-sheltered savings system for children, the Treasury Department said on Monday, April 6, 2026. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

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Bank of New York Mellon and the brokerage Robinhood will work with the federal government to handle the so-called Trump accounts, a tax-sheltered savings system for children, the Treasury Department said Monday.

The new accounts were created last year as part of President Donald Trump’s signature domestic spending bill and will start accepting deposits in July. Four million children have been enrolled so far, according to the IRS, and around 1 million of them qualify for a $1,000 seed contribution from the federal government.

Bank of New York Mellon, a New York-based bank that brands itself as BNY, will be the designated financial agent handling management of the initial accounts. BNY has the world’s largest custodian banking business, holding $60 trillion in assets for pension funds, insurers, and other institutions.

Robinhood, the fast-growing financial technology company, will serve as the accounts’ brokerage and initial trustee and help design the accounts’ app.

Both companies were among the dozens of employers that previously announced plans to seed some Trump accounts with contributions for their workers’ children.

“We’re helping our employees give their children a head start toward a stronger financial future,” Robin Vince, the bank’s CEO, said in December.

The Investment Company Institute, an asset management trade group, has asked the government to make the accounts portable and to let financial companies create a “robust and competitive marketplace” for account trustees and custodians. The government has said it intends to eventually expand the program to make the accounts transferable.

The National Design Studio, a new White House agency charged with modernizing the government’s apps and websites, will work with Robinhood to design the new Trump accounts app. Robinhood has emerged as a major player in low-commission, online trading of stocks and crypto.

Money Locked in Until Child Turns 18

The Trump accounts are intended to be savings and investment vehicles, with some similarities to tax-advantaged retirement accounts. Parents, relatives, employers, and other organizations and individuals will be able to make contributions on a child’s behalf, subject to annual limits. The money will generally remain locked until the child turns 18.

Michael Dell of Dell Technologies and his wife, Susan Dell, donated more than $6 billion to help seed accounts for 25 million children who live in ZIP codes where the median household income is below $150,000. The Dells are depositing $250 in each child’s account.

The government plans to give $1,000 to children born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028, who are U.S. citizens and have a Social Security number.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By: Stacy Cowley/Doug Mills
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

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