Families with older children are asking a fair question: if the $1,000 starter deposit is mostly about newborn eligibility, is a Trump Account still worth opening later? For many households, the answer depends less on headlines and more on time horizon.
An older child has fewer years for compounding, but that does not make the account irrelevant. It changes the math. Parents should compare the child's age, the likely contribution pattern, and whether family supporters will actually use the account once it exists.
This is where behavior matters more than theory. A consistent monthly gift for eight years can still be meaningful, especially if birthdays and holidays turn into repeatable deposits instead of one-off spending.
The key is to avoid treating the newborn window and the broader account decision as the same thing. Eligibility for the government starter deposit is narrow. The question of whether long-term investing still helps an older child is much broader.
If your child is not a newborn, run the numbers honestly. A shorter runway deserves a more deliberate plan, not an automatic no.