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Updates · July 4, 2026

IRS Form 4547, line by line: claiming your child's Trump Account

The $1,000 Trump Account claim is genuinely simple — closer to registering a kid for tee-ball than doing your taxes. The families who hit delays are almost always missing one document or filing a duplicate. Here's the whole thing in plain English.

One form, three ways to file it

Every route runs through IRS Form 4547, "Trump Account Election(s)" (first released December 2025). File it once, one way:

The general program hub is trumpaccounts.gov. Whichever route you pick, file only once — one account per child, and duplicate claims are the #1 cause of processing delays.

And a fact worth repeating because it surprises people: the $1,000 is not deposited automatically. An adult has to file the election. By March 31, 2026, more than 4 million children had been signed up and over 1 million $1,000 contributions claimed — if yours isn't among them yet, that's the whole reason this page exists.

What the claim asks for

  1. The child's full legal name — exactly as it appears on the Social Security card. A nickname mismatch ("Josh" vs. "Joshua") can bounce a claim.
  2. The child's Social Security number. This is the eligibility key. No SSN yet? Apply free through the Social Security Administration first.
  3. Date of birth — must fall between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028.
  4. Your identity as the account opener — name, SSN/taxpayer ID, and relationship to the child.
  5. Your relationship priority. If multiple adults could open the account, the IRS instructions set the order: legal guardian → parent → adult sibling → grandparent. If you're a grandparent and a parent is available, the parent should file.
  6. Qualifying-child status. To claim the $1,000, the child must be (or be expected to be) your qualifying child — your dependent — for the tax year of the election.
Have on the table before you start: the child's Social Security card, the birth certificate, and your own photo ID. Ten minutes of gathering saves weeks of back-and-forth.

The mistakes that delay claims

Scam check: the only official websites are trumpaccounts.gov and irs.gov. Bookmark them. (This site is an independent guide — we never ask for your SSN or any personal data, and the eligibility checker on our homepage runs entirely in your browser.)

Is there a deadline?

No annual scramble: Form 4547 can be filed at any time, and the outer limit is December 31 of the year the child turns 17. But compounding rewards the early — the sooner the $1,000 is invested, the longer it grows. There is no good reason to wait.

After you file

Save the confirmation with the birth certificate. The money is invested in funds tracking the S&P 500 or a similar U.S. stock index, grows tax-deferred, and generally can't be withdrawn until January 1 of the year the child turns 18. Your family can — optionally — add up to $5,000 per year (an employer can contribute up to $2,500 of that $5,000; the government's $1,000 doesn't count against the cap). Whether extra dollars belong here or in a 529 is a real question; we compared them honestly in Trump Account vs. 529 plan.

TrumpHealthcare.us is an independent educational resource, not affiliated with the U.S. government, IRS, or Treasury. Not legal, tax, or investment advice. Program details can change — verify at irs.gov/trumpaccounts. Last reviewed: July 4, 2026.