A. All age-dependent associations indicate that the magnitude of the association between early adversity exposure (vs. no exposure) and brain volume changes with age. pink = negative age-related change with interpersonal early adversity (vs. non-exposed comparison); green = positive age-related change with higher (vs. lower) early socioeconomic disadvantage; dark gray = no age-related associations with either type of early adversity exposure. B. Amygdala and hippocampus show different age-related associations for interpersonal early adversity exposure (vs. no exposure) and early socioeconomic disadvantage. The size of the points reflects the relative sample size. Other regions not shown here exhibit comparable patterns of age-related change for interpersonal early adversity (ventral anterior cingulate cortex [vACC], ventrolateral prefrontal cortex [vlPFC], ventromedial prefrontal cortex [vmPFC]; see Supplementary Information, Figure S24) and early socioeconomic disadvantage (parahippocampus; inferior, middle, and superior temporal gyri; see Supplementary Information, Figure S25). C. Interpersonal early adversity preferentially shapes frontolimbic circuitry, with age-related changes supporting adversity-induced acceleration models. That is, interpersonal early adversity may contribute to early adversity-induced acceleration in childhood with a long-term tradeoff of later allostatic overload and attenuated neural plasticity. Early socioeconomic disadvantage preferentially shapes cortical-limbic structures.