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KS4 · Year 10-11 · Lesson plan

Starting a small business and teen earnings

Last reviewed · Next review due

A classroom-ready 60-minute lesson with starter, main, plenary, differentiation, SEND adaptations, EAL support, assessment criteria and a clear safeguarding frame. Free to use, no login.

Key Stage
KS4
Year group
Year 10-11
Age range
14-16
Duration
60 minutes
Subject
PSHE / Citizenship / Maths / Business
Cost
Free

Learning aim

Pupils can calculate profit from revenue and costs, distinguish fixed and variable costs, set a price that covers costs, explain the difference between being employed and self-employed, and describe the £1,000 UK trading allowance and when a young person would need to tell HMRC.

See the full mapping on the teacher curriculum map.

RESOURCES What you'll need

CONTEXT Background for the teacher

LESSON Lesson structure (60 minutes)

5 min
HOOK
"You sell 20 custom keyrings for £4 each. You feel rich — £80! What's wrong with calling that your profit?" Collect ideas on whiteboards; draw out that costs haven't been taken off yet.
15 min
TEACH
Teach profit = revenue − costs; fixed vs variable costs; pricing to cover cost; and employed vs self-employed plus the £1,000 trading allowance and the "tell HMRC if over £1,000" idea (use the background). Emphasise checking GOV.UK for current figures.
15 min
GUIDED
Groups complete the cost/price/profit planner for their idea card. Worked anchor: 20 keyrings, materials £1.20 each (variable = £24), one-off £10 tool (fixed). Revenue at £4 = £80. Total cost = £34. Profit = £46. Then: what if you'd priced at £2?
15 min
CHALLENGE
Trading-allowance scenario: "Over a tax year your side hustle makes £850. Do you need to tell HMRC?" (Generally no — under £1,000.) "It grows to £1,400. Now what?" (You may need to register for Self Assessment and report it; the £1,000 allowance or real expenses can be deducted.) Pupils write the rule in their own words and note "check GOV.UK".
10 min
PLENARY
Each pupil writes the three things a sensible teen business does from day one: know your cost per item, price above it, and keep a simple record of money in and out. Share three.

DIFFERENTIATION Adapting for all learners

Support

Provide the planner with revenue and the cost list filled in, so pupils only do the subtraction. Give the trading-allowance rule as a two-box flowchart (under £1,000 / over £1,000).

Stretch

Add a break-even calculation (how many must you sell to cover fixed costs?), and a pricing decision with a competitor's price. Explain why deducting the £1,000 allowance vs real expenses could differ.

SEND SEND adaptations

EAL EAL support

ASSESSMENT Assessment criteria

HOME Homework pack

  1. Mini plan. Pick a realistic small idea. List its fixed and variable costs and set a price that makes a profit at 15 sales.
  2. Tax check. In your own words, when would a UK side hustle need to be reported to HMRC? (Expected: when trading income for the tax year is over £1,000 — check GOV.UK for current rules.)
  3. Records task. Design a simple one-page "money in / money out" record you could actually keep.

SAFEGUARDING Classroom safeguarding

Keep it educational. This lesson teaches money and tax thinking; it is not advice to start trading, and pupils should not be pushed to earn. Do not ask pupils to disclose family income or business activity.

Flag the scam overlap. "Make money fast" schemes, recruiting friends, or being asked to move money for someone are not businesses — they can be scams or money-mule recruitment. Link the scam awareness lesson and remind pupils to check anything unclear with a trusted adult. If a pupil discloses a concern, follow your school's safeguarding policy and the Designated Safeguarding Lead.

For real decisions, current rules are at GOV.UK; free guidance is at MoneyHelper.

This is general financial and PSHE education, not advice. Tax figures are tax-year dependent — always confirm at GOV.UK. See our editorial & sourcing policy. Free to use in UK classrooms under Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 with attribution to UK Tax Drag.