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17 Things a Five-Year-Old Should Know About Money
 

Children can start learning about financial basics at an early age. This fact sheet provides parents and teachers with age-appropriate concepts for teaching five-year-olds about money and its use.

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17 Things a Five-Year-Old Should Know About Money


See PDF version: 17 Things a Five-Year-Old Should Know About Money» [PDF, 219KB]

What you want your preschool child to know about money depends on your personal values. Here are some concepts that the Thrive by 5 task force recommends you consider teaching your preschooler:

    Mom teaching daughter to save
  1. Spending, saving, and sharing are ways to use money.
  2. Buying (spending) means trading money for things.
  3. Saving allows you to buy something in the future because you don’t have enough money today.
  4. People have jobs that pay money.
  5. Money also can come from gifts.
  6. You can keep money safe at home and other places.
  7. Paper money and coins are worth different amounts.
  8. Different things have different prices.
  9. People pay for things in different ways.
  10. People have different needs and wants.
  11. People have a limited amount of money to spend.
  12. Money can be spent only once — after you buy something, you need more money to buy something else.
  13. Planning helps people set goals and make choices about money. Young girls saving money in jar
  14. Some things do not cost any money.
  15. People do some things for each other without being paid.
  16. People give money to help others.
  17. People in a community share the cost of some work done for everyone.

For more information about teaching your children about money, visit Thrive by 5.


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17 Things a Five-Year-Old Should Know About Money. Credit Union National Association. 2004. English.