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Ages 8–9 · Needs and wants

Needs and wants — going a bit deeper

You probably already know the difference between needs (food, clothes, somewhere to live) and wants (toys, sweets, that one game everyone's playing). But some things are tricky — sometimes a coat is a need, sometimes it's a want. Here's how grown-ups decide.

Age
8–9
Reading time
5–7 min read
Topic
Needs and wants
Read with
A grown-up if you can
Year
2026
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide is about

A need is something you can't do without. A want is something you would like. Some things are both, depending on the situation. Knowing which is which helps you make smarter choices with your money — and helps your family too.

The simple version

You probably learned this in school already, but let's start there.

Grown-ups have to make sure all the needs are paid for first. Then if there's money left over, it can go to wants and saving.

When something is both

Here's where it gets interesting. Some things flip between need and want.

ThingSometimes a need...Sometimes a want...
A coatYou have one and it's winterBuying a new one when yours still fits
TrainersYours don't fit any moreYou want the new colour
A phoneWalking home alone, parents want to reach youThe latest model when yours still works
Food at a caféYou're out all day, need to eatStopping for ice cream when there's lunch at home
School uniformFor schoolThe expensive brand vs the supermarket one

The "thing" isn't a need or a want by itself. The situation decides which it is.

A useful question to ask

When you really want something, try asking yourself:

None of this means wants are bad. They're not! Wants are part of life and they're part of why we have money in the first place. The point is just to know which is which, so you can decide how much to spend on each.

When money has to choose

Imagine a family has £100 left this week after all the bills are paid.

Here are some things they could spend it on:

That adds up to £170 — more than £100. So someone has to decide what to leave out.

Most grown-ups would buy the school shoes first (real need now), put a bit in savings (future need), and maybe save the lunch and game for next week. That's budgeting in real life.

Smart trick. If you're asking for something, it helps to know whether you're asking for a need or a want. Saying "Can I get new trainers? My old ones are hurting my feet" (need) is very different from "Can I get new trainers because everyone's got these new ones" (want). Both are OK to ask — but the answer might be different.

You can do this with your pocket money too

Your pocket money is small money, but the same idea works. Try this:

  1. Get a piece of paper.
  2. Write down 3 things you'd like to buy soon.
  3. Next to each, write "N" for need or "W" for want.
  4. Look at them. Which would you buy first? Which would you wait on?

If you do this once a month, you'll start to notice your money lasts longer and you actually get the things you wanted most.

For grown-upsOnce a week at the supermarket checkout, name out loud which 3-4 items are needs and which are wants. Children pick up the framework without it ever being a lecture. This is the most impactful needs-vs-wants reinforcement at this age.

NCFor teachers: curriculum links

Full mapping in the curriculum map.

For grown-ups: cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Needs and wants — going a bit deeper. Ages 8–9 guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-8-9-needs-vs-wants.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).
For grown-ups. This guide is written for the child to read, ideally with a grown-up nearby. It explains UK money ideas at a Year 4-5 reading age. It is not financial advice. UK rules can change.