This guide helps adults pick the right starting point, keep sessions short, print the right follow-up sheet, and use the age bands as a route through saving, spending, tax, and investing ideas.
Quick Start
The simplest way to use the games well
Pick one age band, play for 10 to 15 minutes, print one worksheet, then finish with one real-life example: a coin jar, a grocery receipt, a pretend payslip, or a saving goal. The point is not to rush through every game in one go. It is to repeat the same idea until it feels normal.
These notes are designed for quick decision-making. Use them when you want to know session length, what to print, and how to turn a game into a conversation rather than just a click-through.
Ages 5-7 · 10-12 minute sessions
Money Basics
Best for first coins, counting, saving patiently, and learning the difference between needs and wants.
Use after play: ask "Which coin felt easiest to spot?" and "What is worth waiting for instead of buying now?"
Print next: the Ages 5-7 worksheet, then repeat the idea with real coins or a pretend shop.
Use these if the learner wants to stay with one theme and revisit it at a harder level each year. This is often better than trying to finish every page in strict age order.
Saving and goals
Good for children who like visual progress, jars, target amounts, and waiting for something bigger later.
Ages 5-7Piggy bank, rainy-day money, and patient choices
Ages 8-9Saving goals and weekly planning
Ages 10-13+Inflation, growth, and future trade-offs