The Trump Accounts custody race opened on 4 July, when the federal programme began depositing $1,000 into custodial individual retirement accounts for eligible newborns, and brokers that missed out on building the platform immediately began positioning for the transfer business that follows.
Robinhood Builds the Rails, BNY Holds the Assets
The US Treasury tapped Robinhood as the programme’s technology provider and initial trustee, while designating Bank of New York Mellon (BNY) as financial agent under its statutory authority to appoint qualified financial institutions to perform services for the federal government in a fiduciary capacity.
BNY manages the national infrastructure for the programme, working alongside Robinhood which handles the customer-facing app and brokerage services. BNY CEO Robin Vince said: ‘We are honored to be selected as financial agent for Trump Accounts,’ describing it as a collaboration ‘to expand access to financial opportunity for all Americans,’ according to CNBC.
Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev said the company is ‘proud to power Trump Accounts with Robinhood’s technology, and to work alongside a historic and trusted institution like BNY.’ Separately he has described Robinhood’s broader mission as being ‘to democratize finance for all.’ Robinhood committed a further $100 million to develop the interface, a bet that early access to millions of young account holders pays off over decades as balances compound.
Being first through the door matters. As programme trustee, Robinhood sees account holders before any rival does. But families can execute a trustee-to-trustee transfer (a direct move of assets between retirement account custodians, with no tax charge triggered) to any approved provider once their Treasury account is open, and that transfer is the prize the rest of the industry is chasing.
The Trump Accounts Custody Race: What the Rules Allow
Fidelity, Charles Schwab, Vanguard and Bank of America are all approved custodians, each offering an S&P 500 or broad-market index fund within the 0.10% annual fee cap the law sets. Fidelity and Schwab have already published guides explaining how families can transfer their balances once the option becomes available.
Employers are joining as benefit sponsors rather than as custodians. Micron committed $250 million to seed accounts. The Dell family’s pledge is larger and more targeted: according to CNBC, the $6.25 billion commitment will provide $250 grants to up to 25 million children aged 10 and under who live in ZIP codes with a median family income of $150,000 or less and who are not eligible for the federal $1,000 seed. Schwab, JPMorgan, Uber and Chipotle are matching deposits for employees’ children. None of these employer contributions determine where the money is eventually custodied, so the race stays open.
The Trump Accounts custody race also has a structural limitation Forbes has flagged: because Robinhood and BNY‘s account-opening processes typically require a US residential address, American citizens living abroad may find themselves effectively locked out of the official app-based infrastructure.
Index Funds, Fee Caps, and the Scale Bet
Every dollar at launch defaults into a State Street S&P 500 exchange-traded fund. iShares, Vanguard and additional State Street funds become available once an allocation tool goes live. Private contributions from all sources are capped at $5,000 a year, though the federal seed and qualifying charitable gifts fall outside that limit.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the accounts are ‘now live, giving every child a stake in the American Dream,’ and estimated the initial $1,000 could reach roughly $674,000 by retirement, based on an assumed 10.5% annual return. Critics argue the design favours families who can afford to top up contributions, since households that reach the yearly cap gain the most, while lower-income families may receive little beyond the government seed.
FINRA Clears a Compliance Hurdle Ahead of Launch
FINRA filed an amendment to Rule 3210 with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on 17 June 2026 under File No. SR-FINRA-2026-013. The change means broker-dealer employees no longer need written permission from their employer to open a Trump Account at an outside firm, placing the accounts alongside 529 college savings plans and standard investment funds as routine products exempt from the consent requirement.
FINRA explicitly asked the SEC to waive the standard 30-day implementation delay so the exemption would be in place before the 4 July launch. The SEC granted that waiver and published notice of immediate effectiveness on 1 July 2026 (Securities Exchange Act Release No. 105829).
On its own, the Rule 3210 change is procedural. Its broader relevance is that it removes a friction point just as the programme goes live, giving broker-dealer employees the same unrestricted access to Trump Accounts that ordinary members of the public already have. The real contest begins when families start shopping for a permanent custodian, and every firm that has cleared its compliance paperwork is in the running from day one.

