What this is about
Pick a clear jar. Put some money in every week. Watch it fill up. When it's full enough for something you want, take it out and buy that thing. That's saving.
What is saving?
Saving means keeping money instead of spending it now. You keep it for later, when you might want to buy something bigger.
Imagine you get £1 of pocket money every week.
- If you spend it all every week, you always have just £1.
- If you don't spend it, after 4 weeks you have £4.
- After 10 weeks you have £10.
- After a whole year you have £52.
£52 buys lots of things you can't buy with £1. That's the magic of saving.
Why a clear jar is the best place
You can save your money lots of places:
- In a piggy bank (you can't see the money inside)
- In a jar (you can see the money!)
- In a bank account (a grown-up looks after it)
- In a Junior ISA (a special savings account just for kids)
For a small child, a clear jar is the best place to start. Why?
- You can see your money
- You can watch it get fuller every week
- You can pick it up and feel how heavy it's getting
- It feels real, not like a number on a screen
Pick a thing to save for
Saving works best when you're saving for something.
Try this: pick one thing you really want. Not something you need (Mum or Dad will get those). Something you want.
Examples:
- A LEGO set
- A magazine or comic
- A toy you saw at the shop
- A book
- An ice cream at the seaside on a special day
Find out how much it costs. Ask a grown-up to help you. Write the number on a piece of paper and stick it on the jar.
Now every coin you add gets you closer.
How long it takes
Let's say you want something that costs £10.
If you save £1 every week, how many weeks?
That's about two and a half months. It can feel like ages when you really want the thing now.
What helps:
- Mark off each week on a calendar — you can see progress
- Count the money in the jar every weekend — you can feel the growth
- Don't think about the thing every day — the wait feels longer
- Imagine how good it will feel when you finally buy it — not with sad waiting, with happy hope
If you save £2 a week instead of £1, you'd only need 5 weeks. Look how that changes things.
The hardest part
The hardest part of saving is not spending the money when you see something else you want.
Imagine you've saved £6 in your jar (£4 to go!) and you walk past the shop. There's a chocolate bar that costs £1. You really want it.
Two choices:
- Buy the chocolate. Now you have £5 in the jar. You're a week back from your goal.
- Don't buy it. Wait. Add to the jar next week. Still £6, on track.
Both are OK choices — it's your money. But this is what saving means. Saying "not now" so you can say "yes" to something bigger later.
For teachers: curriculum links
- England — Maths Y1/Y2 Money (counting, adding)
- England — PSHE Association KS1 L8 (saving and spending), L9 (waiting and patience)
- Wales — Curriculum for Wales Progression Step 1-2 (HWB, Maths & Numeracy)
- Scotland — Curriculum for Excellence MNU 1-09a, HWB 1-21a
- NI — Mathematics KS1, PDMU KS1
Full mapping in the curriculum map.
UK Tax Drag (2026). Saving in a jar — watching money grow. Ages 5–7 guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-5-7-saving-in-a-jar.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).