Michael Dell and Susan Dell announce that the first 25 million qualifying American children who sign up for Trump Accounts will get ‘personal donation’ from them of…
Dell founder and CEO Michael Dell picked the loudest possible day to write a very large cheque. On July 4, as America marked its 250th birthday, the Dell Technologies founder and his wife Susan announced they were giving $250 each to the first 25 million qualifying American children who sign up for a “Trump Account”—the new government-backed investment vehicle that opened for business the same day. Dell made the announcement on X, framing it as a “public-private partnership” that hands the next generation “a real stake in our economy.” The couple had already pledged more than $6 billion to the program back in December, so Saturday’s post added a number to a commitment already made.Here’s how Dell put it on X: “Today, on America’s 250th birthday, Susan and I are celebrating by giving $250 each to the first 25 million qualifying American children who sign up for their @InvestAmerica24 @TrumpAccounts. This makes every child a shareholder in the greatest prosperity-creating engine the world has ever known—American capitalism. Through this public-private partnership, we’re giving the next generation a real stake in our economy and a path to the American Dream: education, a first home, starting a business, and building lasting wealth. It unites us all in hope and optimism for every child’s future. Happy 250th Birthday, America!”
What a Trump Account actually is
Trump Account is an investment account for kids. Every US citizen born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028, is eligible for a one-time $1,000 seed deposit from the Treasury once a parent enrolls them. Parents act as custodians until the child turns 18, and while no personal contribution is required, families can add up to $5,000 a year. The money goes into broad US stock-market index funds and can’t be touched until adulthood—then only for things like college, a first home, or starting a business.
Why the Dells are targeting older kids
The government’s $1,000 is reserved for babies. The Dell money fills a different gap. Their $250 goes to children aged 10 and under who live in ZIP codes with a median income of $150,000 or less—kids too old to qualify for the Treasury seed but young enough to benefit from years of compounding. Susan Dell has said the point is partly emotional: getting children to feel their “country cares about them.” The couple has pointed to research suggesting kids with their own accounts do better across a range of outcomes, from finishing school to eventually owning a home.
The bigger picture behind Michael Dell and Susan Dell’s gift to Trump
This isn’t a one-off gesture. The $250-per-child pledge builds on the $6.25 billion the Dells committed in December, which ranks among the largest single charitable commitments to US children in the past 25 years. Michael Dell first heard the idea of seeding investment accounts for kids back in 2021, years before the accounts carried Trump’s name, and he and Susan have said they immediately took to it. Dell Technologies has had a remarkable run over the past year, roughly tripling in value on the back of the AI-server boom, which has given the couple far more capacity to give at scale. Their foundation has focused on children in poverty for more than a quarter of a century—through education, healthcare, and financial opportunity—and they frame this as the same mission, just bigger. As Michael put it, the scale has grown as their ability to make an impact has grown.President Trump has claimed the accounts could put $3 to $4 trillion into young Americans’ hands over 15 years. Whether that holds up depends on markets, contributions, and time none of these children can spend yet. What’s certain is the timing was chosen to the day—a birthday gift to the country, with the givers’ names attached to both the account and the cheque.