Trump Accounts Online: File Form 4547 in Your IRS Account
Saving for a child’s future just got a new vehicle — and a faster way to sign up for it. The IRS has added features to the IRS Individual Online Account that let parents and guardians view the status of, and electronically submit, a Trump Account election. If you have been wondering what these accounts are, who qualifies, and how to start one without mailing paper, this guide walks through it using the IRS’s own materials.
At SW Accounting & Consulting Corp, we help Los Angeles families and business owners take advantage of new tax-advantaged savings opportunities. Below: what a Trump Account is, the new online election process, the $1,000 pilot contribution, eligibility, and the practical steps to set one up.
What is a Trump Account? 🇺🇸
A Trump Account is a new type of tax-advantaged individual retirement account for children, created by the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBBA), which was enacted on July 4, 2025.
Parents, guardians, and other authorized individuals can establish a Trump Account for a child who has not reached age 18 by the end of the calendar year in which the election is made and who has a valid Social Security number. The accounts are designed to help families build long-term savings for a child — the IRS describes the purpose as helping children save for college, retirement, and building generational wealth. For full statutory details and the latest guidance, the IRS maintains a dedicated page on the One, Big, Beautiful Bill provisions, and general program information is published at trumpaccounts.gov.
How do I make a Trump Account election online? 💻
You make the election on Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s) — and the IRS now lets you both view its status and submit it electronically inside your IRS Individual Online Account.
Previously, elections like this meant paper forms and processing delays. The IRS has added two capabilities to the IRS Individual Online Account:
- View status — see the latest submission status of your Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s), including next steps.
- Submit electronically — file Form 4547 directly through the online account.
The IRS frames the move as part of becoming a “digital-first agency.” In its announcement, the agency said the new features give taxpayers “real-time visibility into the Trump Account election process,” and that electronic submissions “improve accuracy, speed up processing times, and reduce delays associated with paper forms.”
When the IRS adds an online status tracker for a brand-new election, we tell clients to use it. Paper elections for a newly launched program are exactly where things get lost or stall. Filing Form 4547 through your IRS Individual Online Account gives you a timestamped record and a visible status — so if a child is approaching the age-18 cutoff for the calendar year, you are not guessing whether the election landed.
Who qualifies for the $1,000 Trump Account pilot contribution? 💰
A one-time $1,000 pilot contribution from the U.S. Department of the Treasury is available for eligible children born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028 who are U.S. citizens with a valid Social Security number.
This pilot contribution is a notable feature: for qualifying children in that birth-year window, the Treasury seeds the account with $1,000. Combined with the account’s long time horizon, even a modest starting balance has decades to grow. Eligibility for the seed money turns on three things — birth date in the 2025–2028 range, U.S. citizenship, and a valid Social Security number. The IRS has said it will continue to publish updates and additional details about the tax benefits under OBBBA, so check the official provisions page before relying on any specific figure.
Two requirements trip people up: the child must have a valid Social Security number, and for the account itself the child must not have reached age 18 by the end of the calendar year of the election. The $1,000 pilot is also limited to a specific birth-year window (2025–2028). If you have a newborn or a child nearing 18, confirm the current-year cutoff and get the SSN in hand before you file Form 4547.
How is a Trump Account different from a 529 or custodial IRA? 📊
A Trump Account is a new, federally created account for children with its own rules — including a potential government seed contribution — while 529 plans and custodial IRAs are long-standing, separate vehicles with their own eligibility and use restrictions.
Families already use several tools to save for children: 529 education savings plans, custodial accounts (UGMA/UTMA), and custodial Roth IRAs for kids with earned income. The Trump Account adds a distinct option created directly by statute. Because the program is new and the IRS is still issuing guidance, the smartest approach is to coordinate a Trump Account with the savings vehicles you already use, rather than treating any one of them as a complete plan. The right mix depends on your goals — education, retirement, or general wealth transfer — and your overall tax picture.
What are the steps to open a Trump Account? ✅
- Confirm eligibility — the child is under 18 by year-end and has a valid Social Security number (and, for the $1,000 pilot, was born 2025–2028 and is a U.S. citizen).
- Sign in to the IRS Individual Online Account (or create one and verify your identity).
- Complete Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s), and submit it electronically.
- Track the status in your online account and follow any “next steps” shown.
- Coordinate funding with your broader savings plan and confirm current contribution rules on the IRS OBBBA provisions page.
- Trump Accounts are a new tax-advantaged account for children, created by the One Big Beautiful Bill (enacted July 4, 2025).
- You can now view and submit the election (Form 4547) inside the IRS Individual Online Account.
- A one-time $1,000 Treasury pilot contribution is available for eligible U.S.-citizen children born 2025–2028 with a valid SSN.
- Eligibility requires the child be under 18 by year-end with a valid Social Security number — mind the deadlines.
Frequently asked questions
Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s). You can now view its status and submit it electronically through your IRS Individual Online Account, instead of relying on paper.
A parent, guardian, or other authorized individual can open one for a child who has not reached age 18 by the end of the calendar year of the election and who has a valid Social Security number.
It is a one-time contribution from the U.S. Treasury for eligible children born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028 who are U.S. citizens with a valid Social Security number. Check the IRS OBBBA provisions page for the latest details.
See the IRS page on One, Big, Beautiful Bill provisions, the Form 4547 instructions on IRS.gov, and trumpaccounts.gov. The IRS continues to publish updates as the program rolls out.
How can SW Accounting help? 💼
At SW Accounting & Consulting Corp, we help LA-area families and business owners fit new tax-advantaged accounts into a coherent plan — checking eligibility, filing the Trump Account election correctly, capturing the $1,000 pilot contribution where available, and coordinating with 529s, custodial accounts, and your overall tax strategy. If you have a child who may qualify, we will help you act before the year-end and SSN deadlines.
📩 Ask us about Trump Accounts for your child
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or investment advice. Program rules are new and still being clarified; always confirm current details with official IRS guidance and consult a qualified professional. Primary sources: Internal Revenue Service (IRS Individual Online Account; Form 4547, Trump Account Election(s); One, Big, Beautiful Bill provisions); trumpaccounts.gov.







