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5 money lessons children should learn before they’re 12

Image of children sitting at a desk and writing

Most of us can remember learning to ride a bike, tie our shoelaces or tell the time. These feel like milestones you go through as a child. But how many of us can recall the moment someone sat down and explained how money actually works?

For most people, that moment never came. And the gap it leaves shows up later in life in ways that are hard to ignore. Adults who struggle to budget, who feel anxious when a bill arrives or who reach their thirties without understanding how credit works often lack information they should have been introduced to years earlier.

The earlier money becomes a normal, everyday topic, the better equipped young people are to navigate it. And the foundations do not need to be complicated. Here are five ideas that you can introduce to children before they’re 12 to make a lasting difference.

1. Needs vs wants

Understanding that food, shelter and clothing are things we need, while toys, sweets and games are usually things we want, builds the foundation for every spending decision children will ever make. This single distinction could help them avoid debt, impulse buying and other financial pitfalls.

It sounds simple but that’s the point. Children as young as four can grasp this concept when it’s taught through play and everyday examples. And when it sticks early, it shapes how they think about money for the rest of their lives.

 2. Budgeting

Teaching children to track what comes in and what goes out builds habits that last a lifetime. Start with pocket money. A simple “spend and save” split helps them see that every pound has a purpose, and that staying within a budget means fewer money worries later on.

Budgeting doesn’t have to feel like a chore. When children make decisions about their own small amounts of money, it instantly becomes relatable. They will start to understand trade-offs in a way that no worksheet can fully replicate.

3. Saving

Saving can feel abstract until there’s something to actually save for. Encouraging children to set aside money for a specific toy, experience or unexpected cost teaches delayed gratification and shows them the value of planning ahead before spending.

The habit of saving, of pausing before spending and thinking about the future, is one of the most powerful tools we can give a young person. It takes practice and starting early can make all the difference.

4. Safety comes first

Children are online earlier than ever these days, and scammers can actively target them through gaming platforms, social media and fake giveaways. It’s important they know that no legitimate company, including their bank, will ever ask for a password or payment details out of the blue. Remind them to always check with a trusted adult before clicking a link or sharing any information. The key thing to teach them? If something feels too good to be true, it probably is.

Online financial safety is part of financial education. In today’s digital environment, the two can’t be separated. Teaching children to pause, question and ask for help from the moment they start using smartphones or tablets is a skill that protects them now and builds critical thinking for the future.

5. Emotions and money

Children who learn that it’s normal to feel excited, anxious or even sad around money, and that those feelings are worth talking about, tend to make more confident and considered money decisions as they grow up. Opening up these conversations early makes a real difference.

Money can be an emotional topic for many of us. But talking about money shouldn’t be taboo. The earlier children learn that, the sooner they can start to understand their own relationship with it and build a healthier one. Talking openly about money at home and in school can remove the shame and secrecy that often gets in the way of good financial decision-making later in life.

Start the conversation today

None of these concepts require a financial background or a classroom environment. It’s a simple way to make money a normal part of everyday conversation rather than something that only gets mentioned when things go wrong.

Small, consistent conversations build something bigger over time. A child who understands the difference between a need and a want, who has saved up for something they really wanted, who knows to check with a trusted adult before sharing information online, is already ahead. Not because they have all the answers, but because they’ve learned it’s okay to ask the questions.

That’s where financial confidence begins.

Read more about why children can and should learn about money early.

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