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Conversation pack · Ages 5-7

Where does our money come from? — a 25-minute conversation pack for ages 5-7

A guided 25-minute conversation about where money comes from, what it pays for, and the difference between needs and wants. Designed for a 5-7 year-old. Print this and use it as your guide at the kitchen table.

Audience
Parent + child ages 5-7
Child age
5-7
Total time
20-25 min
You will need
Coins + jar
Format
Read + activity
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

Before you start

Sit down somewhere comfortable with no screens (kitchen table or living-room floor both work). The child sets the pace — if they want to bounce off after 10 minutes, that's fine. The point is to plant ideas, not check boxes.

You will need:

1Warm-up — what is money?5 min

Spread the coins on the table. Pick them up one by one.

You say:

"Let's look at these coins. Can you tell me which is which?"

Let them sort and name each coin.

They'll probably get the big ones (£1, £2, 50p) right and might mix up the smaller bronze coins. That's normal.

You ask:

"What's money for? What do we do with it?"

Most 5-7 year-olds will say "to buy things". That's the right answer. Acknowledge it — "yes, money is for buying the things we need and want."

2Where money comes from7 min

The big idea for this age: money doesn't appear — someone earned it by doing work.

You say:

"Money doesn't appear out of nowhere. It comes from work. When grown-ups do work that helps other people, those other people give them money."

Personalise it.

Give one concrete example from your job. "I go to my job. I [what you do]. The people I help give my work to give me money. That money comes into the bank. Some of it pays for food and the house, some of it I save for later."

Activity: Where does mum/dad's money go?

Take 5 coins (so it's a round number). Place them in a row on the table.

  • Move 1 coin away — "this one pays for food we eat at home"
  • Move another — "this one pays for the house we live in"
  • Move another — "this one pays for things like the gas and the lights"
  • Leave 2 — "these two are left for treats and saving"

The exact ratios don't matter. The point: most money is already spoken for before treats. This is one of the most useful ideas a 5-year-old can encounter.

3Needs vs wants6 min

The conceptual heart of the conversation.

You introduce the words.

"There are two kinds of things money buys. Needs are things we can't go without — food, clothes, a house. Wants are things that are nice to have but we don't need them — toys, sweets, a fancy car."

Activity: Sort it out

Pick 6 things in your house or 6 ideas. Take turns: "is a [thing] a need or a want?"

  • Apples — need (food)
  • A teddy bear — want (nice to have)
  • Shoes — need (going outside)
  • Sweets — want
  • Toothpaste — need (clean teeth)
  • A new bike — want (you already have a way to get around)

Don't worry about edge cases (is the second pair of shoes a need or a want?). The point is the categories exist.

Can you think of a need and a want?
If we only had enough money for one, which would we buy first — the need or the want?

4Saving — waiting for something bigger5 min

Final idea: saving means waiting.

Set up the jar.

Put a few coins in. The child can see them through the side.

You say:

"If you want a big treat that costs more than your pocket money for one week, you can save up. Every time we put a coin in, the jar gets a bit closer."

Pick a goal together.

Something small and concrete: a book, a comic, a small toy. Cost between £3 and £10. Work out how many weeks it would take at their current pocket money rate.

If we put one coin in every week, how many weeks would it take to fill the jar?
Would you rather have a small treat today, or a bigger treat in 6 weeks?

There's no right answer to that question. Let them sit with it.

5Closing — the words you used today2 min

Wrap up by naming what you learned.

You say:

"Today we talked about three big words: work, needs and wants, and saving. They're grown-up money words, and now you know them too."

What word would you tell a friend?
Put the jar somewhere visible — on a bookshelf, kitchen counter, or their room. Visible accumulation is the single most powerful tool at this age.

After the conversation

Best follow-ups in the next week:

Come back to the conversation in 2-3 months with the same pack. Children remember more than they show in the moment.

Cite this pack
UK Tax Drag (2026). Where does our money come from? — a 25-minute conversation pack for ages 5-7. Family conversation pack. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-conv-where-money-comes-from.html
CC BY 4.0. Free to share, photocopy and use in classrooms.
Not financial or legal advice. This is a conversation starter only. Tax rules, benefit thresholds and product features change between UK Budgets — always confirm current rules at gov.uk before making decisions involving real money.