How to Teach Kids About Money: An Age-by-Age Guide
Slug: how-to-teach-kids-about-moneyPillar: Parenting > Family WellnessKeyword: how to teach kids about moneyExcerpt: Teaching kids about money doesn't have to be complicated. Here's a practical, age-by-age guide that actually works.Post #: 567
Why Most Kids Reach 18 Without Understanding Money
Financial literacy isn't taught in most schools — and parents often feel awkward bringing it up at home. So kids learn about money by absorbing adult stress, guessing at how it works, and making expensive mistakes once they're on their own.
You don't need to be a financial expert to raise money-smart kids. You just need age-appropriate conversations and a few practical habits. Here's what works at every stage.
Ages 3–5: Money Is Real and Has Limits
At this age, kids think money is magical. They see you tap a card and things appear. Use coins and notes rather than cards when possible, so children can hold the money and see it leave. When you pay cash for something, narrate what's happening: "I'm giving them £3 for this, and they're giving me 50p back because I paid too much." Simple pretend-shop games work brilliantly here.
Ages 6–8: Introduce Earning and Saving
This is the right age to introduce a small allowance tied to responsibility. A 2024 T. Rowe Price survey found that children who receive a regular allowance are significantly more likely to save regularly as adults. A simple three-jar system works well: one jar for spending, one for saving, one for giving. Even if the amounts are tiny, the habit of splitting money before spending it is incredibly valuable.
Ages 9–12: Needs vs Wants, and Why Waiting Pays Off
Pre-teens are old enough to understand delayed gratification. This is a great age to introduce the concept of comparing prices. If they want a game or a piece of clothing, encourage them to research it first: is it cheaper online? Is there a sale coming? Including them in small family financial decisions gives them real-world practice without any real risk.
Ages 13–16: Bank Accounts, Budgeting, and Part-Time Jobs
Most UK banks offer current accounts for under-16s with parental oversight — Nationwide's FlexOne and Starling's Under-16 Space are popular options. Having their own debit card makes money management feel real. At this age, introduce a simple budget: "Of your monthly spending money, try to save at least a fifth before you spend anything else."
Ages 17–18: Real Money, Real Consequences
Before they leave home or go to university, cover the things most schools skip: how interest on debt works (especially credit cards), what a credit score is and why it matters, how to read a payslip, and what taxes actually are. One practical exercise: go through a mock monthly budget together based on what they'd need to spend if they lived alone. Most teenagers are genuinely shocked by what independent living costs.
The Biggest Mistakes Parents Make
Avoiding the topic entirely is the most common. Children who grow up hearing adults talk openly about budgeting, saving, and spending decisions turn out to be more financially confident as adults. Bailing them out too often is the second mistake — children need to experience the discomfort of running out of money to understand why not running out matters.
FAQ
When should I start teaching my child about money?
As early as age 3, with simple concepts like exchanging money for things. By age 6–7, most children are ready for a regular allowance and basic saving habits.
Should I tie allowance to chores?
Many financial experts suggest separating the two — children do chores because they're part of the family, and they receive an allowance to learn money management. You can offer additional paid tasks on top for children who want to earn extra.
How do I talk to my kids about money if we're struggling financially?
Age-appropriate honesty helps. "We're being careful with money this month" is better than pretending everything is fine or letting children sense tension they can't understand.
What's the best way to teach a teenager about budgeting?
Give them real money to manage for real expenses — transport, school lunches, clothing. When they run out, don't top up. One month of managing their own budget teaches more than years of hypothetical conversations.










