Hook
Start with a realistic choice: spend now, save later, borrow, compare, or check a payslip. No personal family finance disclosures are needed.
Use these as ready-made routes for a single lesson, a collapsed timetable day, or a short financial literacy sequence. Every plan avoids product recommendations and focuses on vocabulary, choices and reasoning.
Start with a realistic choice: spend now, save later, borrow, compare, or check a payslip. No personal family finance disclosures are needed.
Introduce the key words pupils need before using a calculator or worksheet: cost, tax, risk, return, budget, allowance, interest or trade-off.
Use one worksheet or site activity. Pupils explain the choice, not just the answer.
Change one input and ask what moved. This is where pupils learn which lever matters.
One sentence: "The best decision here is... because..." This keeps assessment quick and meaningful.
Ask learners to discuss fictional households, not their own home finances.
Each plan is a self-contained 45-minute lesson with starter, main activity, plenary, differentiation, SEND adaptations, EAL support, assessment criteria, homework and safeguarding notes. National Curriculum codes included for every plan.
Pupils identify the 8 UK coins (1p–£2) and £5/£10 notes by value. Maths Y1 Money, PSHE KS1 L8.
Pupils combine coins to make a target amount and find more than one way to make the same total. Maths Y1/Y2 Money.
Pupils sort scenarios into saving or spending and explain when each is sensible. PSHE KS1 L8 + L9.
Pupils distinguish wants from needs and explain why needs come first. PSHE KS1 L8, Citizenship KS1.
Pupils plan how to split pocket money between spend / save / share pots. Maths Y2 + PSHE KS1 L8.
Pupils add prices, compare to a budget, and choose what to buy when they can't have everything. Maths Y1/Y2 Money.
Each plan is a self-contained 45-minute lesson designed to fit a normal Maths or PSHE timetable slot. Includes differentiation for support and stretch, SEND adaptations, EAL support, and explicit assessment criteria.
Pupils calculate change in £ and p using the counting-up strategy. Maths Y3 Money.
Pupils learn key vocabulary (deposit, withdraw, balance, interest) and the difference between current and savings accounts. PSHE KS2 L17/L18.
Pupils calculate weeks to reach a goal at a weekly saving rate. Maths Y4 + PSHE KS2 L19.
Pupils calculate unit prices and identify the better deal across different pack sizes. Maths Y5 Measurement.
Pupils explore what charities do and make a giving decision with reasoning. PSHE KS2 L21 + Citizenship.
Pupils identify three warning signs of online scams and know what to do. PSHE KS2 L22 + Computing.
Secondary-level lessons covering payslips, income tax, National Insurance, tax codes, first bank accounts, and compound interest. Each 50–55 minute plan includes UK National Curriculum links for PSHE, Maths and Citizenship.
Pupils decode gross pay, deductions (PAYE, NI, pension, student loan), net pay, and year-to-date totals. PSHE KS3 L24/L26, Maths.
The four UK tax bands, why government collects tax, and why earning more never reduces take-home. Citizenship KS3 + Maths.
How NI differs from income tax, what it funds (State Pension, NHS, benefits), with calculations. PSHE KS3 + Citizenship.
Reading tax codes, recognising emergency codes (M1, W1, BR), and what to do if a first-job tax code is wrong.
Teen account features, PIN protection, online banking safety, and what to do if a card is lost. Computing KS3 + PSHE.
Using A = P(1+r)^n with real saver scenarios. Why starting at 18 beats saving longer from 30. Maths KS3.
GCSE-age lessons on the big financial topics teenagers will face within five years: ISAs, mortgages, credit cards, scam awareness, and post-16 decisions. Each plan runs 60 minutes with deep curriculum mapping for PSHE, Maths, Computing and Citizenship.
Cash ISA vs Stocks & Shares ISA vs Junior ISA vs Lifetime ISA. The £20,000 wrapper, transition at 18, and worked examples.
Deposit, term, interest rate, monthly repayment. The 4.5× salary affordability rule. PSHE KS4 L19 + Maths.
How credit cards work, APR explained, the minimum payment trap, and Section 75 consumer protection. PSHE KS4 L19/L20.
Phishing, WhatsApp parent scam, marketplace, romance, AI voice scams. The STOP-CHECK-REPORT rule. PSHE + Computing.
Cost, debt, earnings comparison. Decision framework. Careers KS4 + PSHE KS4 L17/L18.
Building a realistic 12-month budget covering income, fixed and variable expenses, savings, and emergency funds. PSHE KS4.
The detailed lesson plans above complement the age-band PDF packs below. Use the PDFs for collapsed timetable days or a full unit of work; use the individual lessons above for single timetable slots.
| Age band | Lesson title | Learning aim | Best resource |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ages 5-7 | Needs, wants and saving jars | Sort choices and explain why saving sometimes means waiting. | Teacher PDF |
| Ages 8-9 | Budget detectives | Choose between options when money is limited. | Teacher PDF |
| Ages 10-13 | First earnings and first tax words | Understand that gross pay and take-home pay are not the same. | Teacher PDF |
| Ages 14-16 | Payslip decisions and debt warning signs | Read a simple payslip and spot risky borrowing language. | Teacher PDF |
| Ages 16-18+ | ISA, pension and student money choices | Compare long-term trade-offs without turning the lesson into advice. | Teacher PDF |