Your kid's head start —
minus the vanity
The newborn savings account is real money: $1,000 from the Treasury, growing tax-free. The only off-putting thing about it is the name. 530Nay quietly renames it everywhere you read — so you can think about your kid's future instead of someone's ego.
Free · Open source · Collects nothing · Works on every site
The account is good. The name is not.
A $1,000 head start for your child is worth claiming. But for a lot of parents, the name stamped on it is a daily irritation they'd rather not invite into the house — enough to make them tune the whole thing out. That's all 530Nay fixes: it takes the name off, so the branding never gets between your family and a real benefit. We just gave the account a name that describes it instead of flattering anyone.
The only bad part is the name
$1,000
from the U.S. Treasury for every child born Jan 1, 2025 – Dec 31, 2028. Invested and growing tax-free until they turn 18 — yours to add to, never required. A genuine head start. It just has the wrong word on it.
530Nay fixes the word.
An independent tool, not financial advice. Account details live at the official program site.
How it works
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1
Install
Add 530Nay to Chrome. That's the whole setup.
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2
Browse normally
Read the news, your bank, a government form. 530Nay watches for "Trump Account."
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3
See the swap
Every mention becomes "530A Account" — singular or plural, on every site, instantly.
Works everywhere
Renames the term on any page you visit, including text that loads as you scroll.
You're in control
One toggle to pause it. One field to set your own replacement.
Private by design
No accounts, no tracking, no servers. Your settings stay in your browser.
Open source
Every line is public on GitHub. Verify it yourself.
Answers
Does this change my actual account or any money?
No. 530Nay only changes text shown on web pages in your browser — never accounts, balances, banks, or government records. To actually open the account you go through the official process; 530Nay just makes the name bearable along the way.
Will it stop my kid from getting the $1,000?
No. 530Nay changes nothing about eligibility or enrollment. It only changes what you read.
Is this legal?
Yes. It restyles text in your own browser, the same way a reader mode or ad blocker does. It changes nothing on the websites themselves or for anyone else.
Why "530A"?
Because the account should be named for what it does, not who it flatters. "530A" is a neutral, account-shaped stand-in — short, forgettable, and nobody's. Prefer something else? The Advanced settings let you pick your own.
Does it collect my data?
No analytics, no login, no server. Your preferences are stored only in your browser.
Which browsers does it support?
Chrome today. Brave and Edge work too (same engine). Firefox and Safari are on the roadmap.
Is this affiliated with the government or a campaign?
No. 530Nay is an independent, open-source project. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the U.S. government, the Treasury, or any candidate.
Give them the head start. Skip the name.
A real savings account for your kid — without the branding in your face every time you check on it.