Frequently Asked Questions, Answered.

Get ready to claim your child’s investment account, and their money. Backed by the U.S. Treasury and built to grow with them.

How is this different from traditional charitable giving?

Traditional philanthropy often funds services that are spent once. Investment accounts convert charitable dollars into assets that grow over time. This shifts philanthropy from consumption to ownership, allowing children and families to build on an initial investment into a growing asset.

How are eligible children identified?

By law, charitable contributions must be made to defined groups rather than individual households. Geographic criteria such as ZIP codes and age groups are used as objective, lawful proxies to reach large groups of children, typically at least 5,000 at a time.

What’s the role of public policy play?

Public policy establishes the account infrastructure, while philanthropy accelerates adoption and participation. This combination allows private capital to amplify government action, moving faster and reaching more families than either could alone.

Why does putting money in the account matter?

When families know funds are already available, they are far more likely to open and activate accounts. Early contributions create momentum, increase participation, and ensure that more children actually benefit from the policy.

How can philanthropists participate or add value?

Philanthropists can contribute to accounts in specific geographies, age cohorts, or states. Beyond funding, they can layer incentives such as matching contributions, bonuses tied to milestones, or support for account activation and engagement.

Are these accounts only about money?

No. While capital is foundational, the accounts also serve as platforms for learning. As balances grow, families engage more naturally with financial concepts, creating opportunities to connect assets with financial education, workforce preparation, or postsecondary planning.

What is the long-term vision for this approach?

The long-term opportunity is a shared, national infrastructure that multiple philanthropic actors can build on. Over time, this can align capital, education, and engagement around a single child-centered asset, strengthening families and expanding economic mobility at scale.