Logo

Jooish News

LatestFollowingTrendingGroupsDiscover
Sign InSign Up
LatestFollowingTrendingDiscoverSign In
JBizNews

IRS Says Trump Account Contributions Won’t Trigger Gift Tax Paperwork for Families

Jun 29, 2026·4 min read

The Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department said Monday that money relatives put into a child’s new Trump Account will not force them to file a gift tax return, removing a paperwork headache that had worried families ahead of the accounts’ July 4 launch. The agencies laid out the relief in Revenue Procedure 2026-25, establishing a transfer tax safe harbor for certain individual donors. Frank J. Bisignano, the chief executive officer of the IRS, said the relief responds to concerns from taxpayers who planned to contribute but worried the donations would trigger the gift tax reporting rules.

Here is the plain-English version. A Trump Account is a new savings and investment account for children, created by last year’s tax law. Parents, guardians, grandparents and others can contribute up to $5,000 a year in after-tax dollars, which is invested in mutual funds or ETFs that track the S&P 500 or another index of primarily American equities. The money generally cannot be withdrawn before the year the child turns 18.

That last detail was the source of the problem. Under normal tax rules, a gift only escapes paperwork if the recipient can use it right away. Because a child cannot reach the cash for years, contributions were considered gifts of future interests, not present interests, and only present-interest gifts qualify for the annual exclusion. On paper, that meant a grandparent who put a few hundred dollars into a grandchild’s account could be required to file Form 709, the federal gift tax return, even though no tax would be owed.

Monday’s guidance fixes that. Qualifying contributions are now treated as completed gifts that are not gifts of future interests and to which the annual per-donee exclusion applies, relieving eligible taxpayers of the obligation to file a gift tax return. Those contributions count toward the annual gift exclusion, which is $19,000 per recipient for 2026.

The conditions are straightforward for ordinary families. The donor must be an individual; the only taxable gifts that person makes during the year must be cash contributions to one or more Trump Accounts, made before the year the beneficiary turns 18; and total gifts to each child cannot exceed the $19,000 annual exclusion. Stay inside those lines and the paperwork disappears.

The scale of the relief is large. Lawrence Pon, a certified financial planner and accountant in Redwood City, California, said the change lifts a real burden. He noted the IRS normally receives about 300,000 gift tax returns a year, and that the number could have run into the millions had Trump Account contributions all required one.

The accounts themselves are off to a fast start. Known as 530A accounts, they are open to any U.S. child under 18 with a Social Security number and include a one-time $1,000 pilot contribution from the Treasury for babies born from 2025 through 2028. That federal deposit is not treated as a taxable gift. More than 6 million American children have already been signed up, according to Treasury’s recent tally.

The official launch is July 4. Families can open an account by filing IRS Form 4547 with their tax return or on TrumpAccounts.gov. Beyond the individual limit, an employer may contribute up to $2,500 per year to an employee’s or dependent’s account, and that money does not count toward the employee’s taxable income. The annual limits are indexed to inflation starting after 2027.

For most families, the bottom line is simple. The vast majority of donors are unlikely to ever owe federal gift, estate or generation-skipping tax, given the lifetime exclusion of $15 million. The old rule did not create a tax bill so much as a filing chore, one that tax advisers had warned could discourage grandparents and other relatives from helping out. Removing it makes the accounts easier to use as a long-term gift to a child.

There is a business angle for advisers and employers too. Financial firms that will manage the accounts, along with payroll and benefits companies, had been waiting for clarity before fully marketing them. Monday’s guidance settles one of the larger open questions, clearing a path for banks, brokerages, and employers to promote the accounts to families and staff.

Tax professionals had flagged the issue for months. Many expected either a technical correction or regulations to make clear that contributors would not have to file a gift tax return. With the launch days away, the agency acted on its own, smoothing the rollout of one of the signature savings programs from last year’s tax overhaul.

JBizNews Desk
New York
© JBizNews.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or distribution without written permission is prohibited.

View original on JBizNews