Accounts6-minute read · Updated April 26, 2026

UTMA Accounts Explained: A Parent's Guide to Custodial Investing

What a UTMA is, when control passes to your kid, and how it stacks up against a 529.

UTMA stands for Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. It's a custodial account a parent (or any adult) opens on behalf of a child, and it's one of the most flexible ways to invest money that's ultimately for your kid.

Unlike a 529, which can only be used for education, a UTMA can hold almost anything: stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, even real estate in some states. The catch? control eventually transfers to the child, usually at age 18 or 21 depending on your state. The day they hit that age, the money is legally theirs to do whatever they want with.

The three things to know up front

  1. It's the kid's money from day one.Even though you control the account, the IRS treats UTMA assets as the child's, not yours. That has tax consequences (see "kiddie tax" below) and financial-aid consequences for college.
  2. Contributions are irrevocable.Once money goes in, it can't come back out to you. You can spend it on things that benefit the child, but you can't return it to your own pocket.
  3. Control transfers at the age of majority. 18 in most states, 21 in others (a handful let you delay to 25). On that birthday, your kid can withdraw the balance and legally do anything with it.

How a UTMA differs from a 529

FeatureUTMA529 Plan
What can it pay for?Anything that benefits the childEducation only (with penalties for non-qualified withdrawals)
Tax treatmentTaxed annually (kiddie tax rules)Tax-free growth + tax-free withdrawals for education
Investment optionsAnything (stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, etc.)Limited to plan's investment menu
ControlTransfers to child at majorityStays with parent / account owner indefinitely
Financial aid impactHigh — counts as student asset (~20% reduction in aid)Lower — counts as parent asset (~5.6% reduction)
Beneficiary changesCannot change — locked to original childCan change to another family member

The kiddie tax, explained

UTMAs have a tax structure designed to prevent parents from shifting income to kids in the lowest tax brackets. Here's the 2026 framework:

  • The first $1,350 of unearned income is tax-free.
  • The next $1,350 is taxed at the child's rate (typically 10%).
  • Anything above $2,700 is taxed at the parent's marginal rate.

For most families with modestly-sized UTMAs, that means almost no tax bill. But it also means UTMAs aren't a great tax shelter for high-net-worth families with large balances.

When does a UTMA make sense?

UTMAs are a strong fit when:

  • You want maximum flexibility in how the money can be used (not just college).
  • You expect modest annual contributions — small enough that the kiddie tax is a non-issue.
  • You're comfortable with your kid having full control at 18 or 21.
  • You're receiving gifts from grandparents who want to invest for the child.

They're a worse fit when:

  • You're saving primarily for college (a 529 is better tax-wise).
  • The child is likely to need need-based financial aid.
  • You're worried about how a 21-year-old will handle a large lump sum.

The control-transfer reality check

The biggest UTMA mistake parents make: not internalizing that the money is the kid's on day one, and they get full control sooner than feels comfortable. If you put $50,000 in a UTMA when your kid is 5, by the time they're 21 it might be $200,000. They can legally use that for grad school, a down payment, or — in the worst case — a Tesla and a Vegas weekend.

The two ways parents handle this:

  1. Be intentional about the size. Use a UTMA for "starter capital" (a few thousand dollars) and keep larger sums in accounts you control longer.
  2. Build the money habits early. Show your kid the account from age 6 or 7. Talk about what's in it. By 18 they've had a decade of context, not a sudden windfall. (This, incidentally, is what we built MemoryBank for.)

What to do this week

  1. Decide if you want a UTMA in your stack at all (see fit criteria above).
  2. Pick a brokerage. Most major brokerages offer them at zero cost — Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, M1.
  3. Open the account in your child's name with you as custodian.
  4. Fund it modestly to start. You can always add more.
  5. Connect it in MemoryBank so the balance is visible to the actual owner.
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MemoryBank is a display and education tool, not a financial advisor. Nothing here is investment, tax, or legal advice. Verify program details with the IRS, your tax advisor, or a licensed financial professional before making decisions.