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Ages 10–13 · Saving

Saving for a goal — how to actually do it

A goal makes saving easy. Without a goal, money in a savings account just sits there until you spend it on something forgettable. With a goal, you watch the number grow toward something you actually want. Here's how to set goals that work.

Age band
10–13
Reading time
6–8 min read
Topic
Saving for a goal
UK relevance
UK-wide
Year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

Pick one thing you actually want. Find out exactly what it costs. Work out how many weeks of saving it would take at your current pocket money. Write down the goal and the date — this alone makes you 3x more likely to hit it. Use a separate savings account or a jar so the saved money isn't in your spending pot.

Why goals work and "just saving" doesn't

If you ask most teenagers and tweens "are you saving?", a lot say yes. Ask them what for and they say "just, like, saving." The money usually disappears within a year on small things that nobody remembers.

Saving for a specific goal is different:

Research finding. A 2023 study by the Money & Pensions Service found UK 11-14 year-olds with a written savings goal were 3x more likely to hit it than those with the same income who said they were "trying to save". Writing the goal down is half the trick.

Pick a good goal

Bad goals: vague, too cheap, too expensive, too far away.

Good goals at 10-13:

Examples of good goals at this age:

Work out the maths

Step 1: find the exact cost. Don't guess. Look it up.

Step 2: work out how much you can put aside each week or month. Be honest — don't plan to save 100% of your pocket money for 8 weeks, that never works.

Step 3: divide.

Worked example. You want a £45 game. You can save £4 a week.

Goal
£45
Per week
£4
Weeks needed
12 (3 months)
Target date
[date 12 weeks away]

Write the goal, amount, weekly contribution and target date on one sheet of paper. Pin it somewhere visible — in your room, inside a notebook, on the fridge.

Where to keep the money

The single biggest reason teenage saving fails: money sits in the same account as spending money. By week 8, you "borrow from the savings" and you're back to zero.

Three solutions in order of friction:

Whichever you choose, set up a standing order to move the saving amount automatically on the day after your pocket money lands. Don't rely on remembering — willpower is bad, automation is good.

What to do when life happens

Three scenarios:

You hit the goal early. Maybe you got birthday money in the middle. Two options:

You're falling behind. Maybe a school trip ate into your spending money. Options:

You hit the goal and lost interest. Happens. The thing you wanted in February might feel less exciting in June.

Don't. Beat yourself up about it. Saving is a skill that takes practice. Even a failed goal teaches you something. The kids who never try are the ones who never get good at it.

NCNational Curriculum links

Full mapping in the curriculum map.

Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Saving for a goal — how to actually do it. Ages 10–13 guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-10-13-saving-for-a-goal.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).
Not financial advice. This guide explains how the UK system works for learning. If you're under 18, ask a parent or carer before doing anything with real money. UK rates and rules can change — always check gov.uk for the latest.