President Trump signed an executive order On April 30, 2026, the Treasury Department was directed to launch TrumpIRA.gov by January 1, 2027 – a new federal portal that will list low-cost IRAs eligible for a match up to $1,000.
The benefit being promoted is not technically new, however, having been created under the SECURE 2.0 Act, which was signed into law by President Biden in December 2022.
why it matters: The order brands a federal IRA portal around the President’s name, but does not include the underlying $1,000 match (the Federal Saver’s Match) was already scheduled to take effect in 2027 under existing bipartisan legislation. It replaces the old saver’s credit. This order does not create matching or appropriate new funding for this.
Origins of the Biden-era: Comes from Section 103 of the Federal Saver Match safe 2.0. Starting in 2027, eligible savers under specific income limits can receive a 50% federal match up to $2,000 in retirement contributions, capped at $1,000 per year.
It replaces the old Saver’s Credit, which was a non-refundable tax credit that encouraged saving. As the order itself acknowledges, its policy objective is “to increase public awareness of the Federal Saver Match enacted in the bipartisan SECURE 2.0 Act.”
What the command actually does:
- Directs Treasury to create TrumpIRA.gov by January 1, 2027
- Standards set for indexed IRAs: 0.15% maximum net expense ratio, index-based investment menu, no minimum balance requirement
- Asks Treasury and Labor to issue guidance on employee-protection rules and charitable contributions to IRAs
- Legislative recommendations were sought from Treasury to codify portable, low-fee accounts for workers without employer plans.
According to the numbers:
- 50% annual match on contributions, up to $2,000 (for a maximum of $1,000 in matching funds)
- 0.15% maximum expense ratio on listed IRAs
- January 1, 2027 Launch deadline for TrumpIRA.gov
Who it targets: Independent contractors, gig workers, self-employed Americans, part-time employees, and small-business workers – groups that have historically lacked 401(k) access. The Thrift Savings Plan (TSP), referred to as a model, is a federal employee retirement system known for having a very low expense ratio.
How it connects: According to the BLS, nearly half of private sector workers do not have access to a workplace retirement plan, and IRA contribution rates remain low among gig workers. Saver Match (no matter its name) is the largest expansion of Saver Credit since the program was created in 2001.
what to watch: Treasury has yet to publish the criteria by which IRA providers qualify, finalize how matching contributions flow into accounts (the match is paid into the IRA, not the taxpayer), and decide how non-filers will claim benefits.
A deeper question is whether the federal “approved list” of private IRAs creates fiduciary risks and industry comment is likely to come ahead of the January 2027 launch.
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