Why this site exists
The program launched July 4, 2026 into an information vacuum with three bad occupants: news articles frozen at publication, official pages that answer what but rarely your situation, and an instant bloom of scam sites hunting the confused. Millions of families with real money at stake — the $1,000 seed, the Dell $250, employer benefits — were left googling into that swamp. We built the fourth occupant: a single site that covers every rule, every situation, and every edge case, in plain English, with its homework showing.
Our model is simple: be so thorough, so current, and so honest that families bookmark us for the whole eighteen-year ride — and monetize attention the boring, disclosed way (advertising, clearly-marked affiliate relationships) rather than the predatory way this niche invites. When we recommend an action, it is because the rules support it; when the rules are unsettled, we say so out loud, which brings us to the editorial promises.
The editorial rules we operate under
Primary sources first. Claims trace to the statute, IRS guidance, Treasury announcements, and verifiable program documents — cataloged with links on our Sources page — before any secondhand reporting. Dated review stamps. Every guide carries its last-reviewed date, because a two-day-old program’s guidance evolves and undated advice rots silently. Uncertainty flagged, not smoothed. Where IRS guidance is still filling in — correction mechanics, aid treatment, edge-case timing — we mark the boundary rather than guessing confidently; the phrase we track this appears on this site because we mean it.
Corrections with receipts. When we get something wrong, we fix it within days of verification and note the change; readers who spot errors reach us at contact@trumpaccountspro.com and genuinely improve the site. Verification before listing. Our match and company trackers list programs only after confirmation against primary sources — a tracker that repeats rumors becomes the scammers’ citation, so we would rather list late than list wrong.
What we never do — the anti-scam covenant
This niche’s predators impersonate helpers, so our negative promises matter as much as our positive ones. We never collect Social Security numbers — not yours, not your child’s, not in any form, quiz, or checker, ever. We never charge for enrollment, expediting, eligibility checks, or unlocking deposits, because none of those services legitimately exist — enrollment is free through the two official doors, full stop. We never open, manage, or touch accounts; we are a library, not a bank.
We never initiate contact asking for information — no texts, no calls, no urgent emails about your deposit; anything claiming to be us doing so is an impersonation worth reporting. If this site ever appears to violate any covenant on this list, treat it as compromised and tell us immediately. The full field guide to the cons we built these rules against lives in our scam guide — reading it protects you from every site, including ours.
How the site is funded, disclosed plainly
Independent publishing still has bills, and ours are paid the disclosed way: advertising may appear on these pages, and some links may be affiliate relationships — meaning if you open an account or buy a product through them, we may earn a commission at no cost to you. Two lines we do not cross: coverage is never for sale — no company pays to appear in our trackers, rank in our comparisons, or soften our verdicts — and recommendations follow the rules, not the commissions; where our comparison guides tell you a 529 or a Roth beats the account for a given dollar, that conclusion cost us money to publish, which is rather the point.
Affiliate relationships, where they exist, are disclosed; the disclaimer, privacy policy, and terms carry the formal versions of everything on this page. And the standing offer: if any monetization ever seems to bend the editorial rules, call it out — contact@trumpaccountspro.com reaches humans who would rather fix it than defend it.
How to use this site — and hold it accountable
Start at the flagship guide if you are new, the calculator if you want numbers, or the situation guides (grandparents, new parents, divorced parents, immigrant families) if you want your answer specifically. Every page cross-links its neighbors; the site map holds the full inventory; the 530A Bulletin delivers updates when guidance actually changes — no filler, no daily noise.
And hold us to all of it: check our claims against the primary sources we cite, compare our review dates against the news, and report anything stale, wrong, or scammy-adjacent. A guide site earns trust the way the account earns compounding — slowly, verifiably, and with receipts. We intend to be here, current and honest, when today’s newborns convert their accounts in 2044.