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$50 to Jumpstart your Teen’s Financial Learning

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Published August 8, 2025 • Updated August 8, 2025
$50 to Jumpstart your Teen’s Financial Learning

Quick Facts

What is the best way to start teaching kids about money?
Fidelity Investments recommends beginning with $50 in real cash to help kids grasp money's value before introducing them to digital finance concepts.
How does using real money help children learn financial basics?
Hands-on activities like counting coins and making purchases with cash let children see and feel the value, reinforcing key money management skills.
At what age should kids get a debit card, according to the article?
Fidelity suggests introducing teens to debit cards once they've mastered savings and checking accounts, helping connect digital spending with real limits.
How does digital money confuse kids compared to real cash?
Digital money in video games can blur reality for kids, making it crucial to clarify that online spending has real-world consequences and limits.
Where can parents learn more about raising money-smart kids?
Parents can visit Fidelity.com to watch educational webcasts like 'Raising money-smart kids' and explore youth account guides for practical tips.
Should I give my kids real money or let them use digital apps to learn about money?
Real money is the best place to start. Physical coins and bills are tangible and help kids understand the basic concept that money can be exchanged for things they want. Once they grasp this with real currency, you can gradually introduce them to digital money. The key is starting with what they can see and touch before moving to the abstract world of digital transactions.
Why are my kids confused about money when they play video games?
Many video games, even educational ones, use virtual money as rewards that kids can spend on in-game items like pets or clothes. While this introduces the concept of earning and spending, kids can get confused between the fake money in games and real money in the actual world. This confusion can lead to problems later on, so it's important to clearly explain the difference between game money and real money.
What's a good first step to teach my child about spending money wisely?
A great starting point is to make money tangible through hands-on activities. Try putting price tags on items from your pantry and give your child a pile of coins to count out the correct amount. This teaches them both counting skills and the basic concept of exchanging money for goods. As they get comfortable, you can teach them how to make change, which is an important life skill.
How do I help my kid understand that digital money is real money?
Take your child to a physical bank and help them deposit real money or allowance into a savings account. Then show them online how their physical coins and bills have become digital money in their account. This visual connection helps them understand that banks hold both types of money and that digital money has real value and real consequences, just like cash.
When should I introduce my kids to checking accounts and ATMs?
Once your child has mastered a savings account, you can move on to a checking account. Elementary school age is typically when kids are ready to understand electronic spending. Show them how to write a check and take them to an ATM so they can see how digital money becomes physical cash. This reinforces that money can move between digital and physical forms, and you can also discuss practical things like ATM fees.

Fidelity Investments creative contentKey takeaways

  • Start young kids off with real money before introducing them to the digital world of money.
  • Make sure kids know that using digital money is not a game and will have real consequences.
  • Introduce teens to safe digital spending using financial tools, such as debit cards.

Today, digital money is business as usual, as more people use their smart devices to conduct their financial transactions. So how do you teach children about money in this digital age?

Medium of exchange

Language is one of the early experiences a child will have with abstract, symbolic concepts. And if a child can work that one out, they can work out that silver coins and green pieces of paper can be exchanged for things they really want. The question is: When do they understand this?

If you ask your children what Mommy or Daddy do with money, and they can answer "buy things with it," then they've grasped the basic concept of using money as a medium of exchange.

Because this young generation has grown up in the digital world, they're incredibly comfortable with the virtual universe. They probably were introduced to this world via video gaming. And many video games, even educational ones, reward players with virtual money that they can use to buy in-game rewards, like pets, clothes, furniture, and more. So subtly, kids are being introduced to the concept of medium of exchange, and the power of earning and spending already.

But playing these video games and "earning" fake money can cause confusion between digital gameplay and the real world of money—which can lead to unwanted problems in adulthood.

Here are 5 tips to help you introduce your kids to digital money:

1. Make money real for young kids

It's the tangibility of money that makes it such a useful tool in teaching children how the world is structured. To make lessons real, start with actual hard currency before introducing your kids to the digital kind. Coins and bills are tangible and visible. Kids still see them every day, and they quickly grasp the general concept.

Incorporate counting and coin-sorting activities into your gameplay. Get some items out of your pantry and put "price tags" on each, then give your kids a pile of change. Have them count out the right amount to buy every item. As they grasp this concept, you can start to teach them how to make change, an important life skill.

2. You can bank on it

Take kids into a physical bank and allow them to deposit some of their real gift money or, even better, hard-earned allowance, into a joint savings account with you. Then go home and show them how their bills and coins became digital money in their online account. Explain that banks hold both hard currency and virtual money.

3. Check it out

After your kids have mastered a savings account, set up a joint checking account and allow them to use some of their spending money. Show kids how to write a check, just so they understand how it works. Although this is a disappearing life skill—even the US Department of the Treasury1 sends most of its Social Security checks out electronically—it's still important to know.

When they're elementary school age, kids should be ready to understand electronic spending. If they receive an allowance, show your kids how you're paying them by putting money into their online account. When they want to spend physical money, a trip to the ATM to get cash will reinforce how real money can become digital money and vice versa.

It's also a great time to discuss what ATM fees might be involved. Explain that the bank is providing a service that must be paid for; the ATM needs to be serviced by real people, who load the machine with bills. Some banks or financial institutions may not charge or may reimburse fees, but in general it's good to prepare kids to pay attention to fees. Also, explain that ATM cardholders get a secret personal identification number (PIN)—that should never be shared with anyone—that allows them to deposit and withdraw money.

4. Start with debit cards

Teens innately understand digital money. But they may need help understanding that money, digital or not, is a finite resource. Debit cards do just that.

Explain that a debit card may look like a credit card, but the bank makes you have money in your account in order to use it as a convenient way to buy things. When you run out of money, the debit card doesn't work. Teens also have many payment and money movement options available to them, but begin with a debit card, and then you can expand the lessons to include other monetary tools.

5. Build smart online consumers

Older teens understand the world of online advertising and know that social media gives them important information to make them savvy consumers. Teens can research their choices, shop sales, read reviews, compare products, and hopefully hold off on impulse shopping.

Taking a 2-week time-out to really research an expensive purchase can help to distinguish a want from a WANT for a teen. See if your teen will agree to "press pause" for 2 weeks to think about why they want to buy something and if they're committed to using their own money. If your teen is earning their own money, their spending decisions will be even more valuable to them.

We live in an exciting new electronic world, but it's our job as parents and grandparents to prepare our next generation for how this new world influences them. It's also important to teach kids and teens to protect themselves from hackers and lurkers. Their private information can be stolen and they need to learn ways to protect it.

To learn more, watch a Viewpoints webcast on Fidelity.com: Raising money-smart kids

When it comes to money and children, it's not important what form it is, how it's created, or how it moves. When it comes to money, it's all about teaching your values and life skills to your kids ... nothing more, nothing less.

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1. "Social Security Direct Deposit," Social Security Administration, https://www.ssa.gov/deposit/Opens in a new window.

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