16 Fun Ways to Teach Kids Financial Literacy This Summer
Teaching kids financial literacy doesn’t have to be complicated. Summer can be the perfect time to teach children and teens real-world money skills through allowances, chores, summer jobs, grocery shopping, and vacation budgets. This guide shares 16 practical ways parents can help kids learn budgeting, saving, spending, and financial responsibility that can last a lifetime.
Why Summer Is the Best Time to Teach Kids about Money
Most kids in the U.S. are not learning financial literacy in school.
Only a handful of states require a personal finance course to graduate.
That means, if parents don’t teach kids to budget, no one will.
Summer can be the perfect classroom.
- There’s money coming in from chores and summer jobs.
- There’s money going out on snacks, activities, and vacations.
- There’s enough time to slow down and talk about it.
Here are 16 practical ways to make this the summer your kids can actually learn how to handle money.
How Do You Teach a Child to Budget? Start with the Basics
#1 Explain What a Budget Is
Before anything else, explain what a budget is and why it matters.
This is as simple as explaining that a budget is a spending and saving plan based on how much money you have and spend.
For example, if your child gets an allowance of $40 a month, show them: Here’s what comes in, here’s what goes out, here’s what’s left. That’s a budget.
#2 Do the Math Together
Take it to the next level and do the math with your kids.
Let’s say your kids get $40 allowance each month for doing chores. Break the numbers down.
Do they have any expenses they cover each month, such as a subscription service? Subtract the cost of this service. Next, subtract the costs of typical spending, such as snacks at the gas station or movie tickets.
Kids should see how quickly money disappears so they can budget more effectively.
#3 Download Kid-Friendly Budgeting Apps
Make it easy by downloading an app that tracks spending automatically.
Younger kids tend to do well with apps like Rooster Money.
Teens often prefer something closer to what adults use, like a basic expense tracker.
The goal is visibility.
When kids can see their balance drop in real time, they hopefully will think twice before spending.
#4 Set a Savings Goal
Kids, just like adults, typically budget better when they have a reason to save.
Have them pick one thing they really want this summer – a toy, a game, a day at a waterpark.
Then work backward: How much do they need to save each week to get there?
A clear goal can turn budgeting from a chore into a plan.
How Can Kids Earn Money to Practice Budgeting?
#5 Give Kids Summer Chores
If you want to teach kids to budget, you may need to give them opportunities to earn money.
Think about summer-specific tasks: Mowing the lawn, pulling weeds, washing the car, or watering plants while a neighbor is away.
The work helps teach responsibility. The paycheck helps teach money management.
#6 Encourage Older Kids to Find a Summer Job
A part-time or summer job can be one of the best financial education experiences a teenager can have.
When kids earn their own money, they usually think very differently about how they spend it.
A $30 shirt can feel different when it costs 2 hours of work.
What Is the Best Way to Teach Kids about Needs vs. Wants?

#7 Talk about Needs vs. Wants
Summer can have many temptations: Ice cream every day, new clothes for vacation, another app purchase.
Use these moments to ask: Is this something you need, or something you want?
There’s no wrong answer.
Wants are fine, but helping kids name the difference can build the habit of thinking before spending.
#8 Decide in Advance What Kids Will Pay For
If you don’t set expectations, you may end up paying for everything.
At the start of summer, sit down and agree: What will you cover, and what is their responsibility? Gas money, extra snacks, app purchases, souvenirs?
When kids know they’re on the hook for something, they can budget for it.
#9 Give Kids a Vacation Budget
Before any family trip, give each child a set amount of money for souvenirs and extras.
Tell them that’s it.
This helps to stop the endless “Can I have this?” cycle in gift shops.
And it gives them a real decision to make: Do I buy this small thing now, or save for something bigger later?
That’s a skill they can use for the rest of their lives.
What Are Fun Ways to Teach Kids to Budget?
#10 Play Board Games That Involve Money
Some of the best financial lessons don’t feel like lessons.
Monopoly, The Game of Life, and similar games teach kids to manage money, weigh risk, and deal with unexpected expenses – all while having fun.
This can be a great option for rainy days and younger kids who aren’t ready for spreadsheets.
#11 Have Kids Research the Cost of Activities
When your child asks to do something, turn it into a lesson.
Have them look up the price.
Admission, parking, food, souvenirs – ask them to add it all up.
Then talk honestly about whether it fits the budget, or whether they need to find a less expensive alternative.
Involving kids in the real numbers helps to build financial awareness fast.
#12 Have Kids Budget for a Party or Event
Want to give your kids a true budgeting challenge? Let them plan something.
Give your child a set amount to host a sleepover or pool party.
They’re in charge of deciding what to buy and what to leave out.
When it’s their money – even if you gave it to them – they typically make very different choices.
#13 Put Kids in Charge of Grocery Shopping for a Week
Give your child a grocery budget and a list. Let them figure out how to make it work.
If a week feels like too much, start small: Let them plan and shop for one family dinner.
Compare prices, make trade-offs, and see how far the money goes.
This is one of the most practical financial skills you can teach and they’ll use it forever.
What Tools Help Kids Learn to Budget?
#14 Use Cash So They Can See It
There’s something powerful about physical money.
When kids hand over cash, they can feel the loss, where swiping a card doesn’t teach the same lesson.
For younger kids especially, give them cash for their budget and let them manage it.
#15 Try the Old-Fashioned Envelope System
Label three envelopes: Save, Spend, Give.
When your child gets money, help them divide it.
Seeing the envelopes, and watching the “Spend” envelope shrink, is a hands-on way to help understand allocation.
#16 Take Advantage of Debit Cards Designed for Kids
If your kids are old enough, consider a debit card built for children, like Greenlight.
These cards connect to the parent’s account and let you set limits, allocate funds automatically, and track spending in real time.
Kids use the app to see exactly how much money they have, and typically, they quickly learn to stay within their budget when they know the balance is always visible.
Key Takeaways
- Kids learn to budget best through hands-on experience, not lectures.
- An allowance, chores, or a summer job gives them real money to practice managing.
- Setting a concrete savings goal makes budgeting feel purposeful.
- Apps, debit cards, and simple math tools help kids see exactly where their money goes.
- Summer spending (vacations, activities, snacks) creates natural, low-stakes lessons.
Make Sure Your Own Retirement Savings Are on Track
We believe teaching your kids about money is important, and so is protecting your own financial future.
If you have questions about your 401(k) or want to make sure your retirement plan is working as hard as it should be, we’re here to help.
Book a complimentary 15-minute 401(k) Strategy Session with one of our advisors.





