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Parent guide · Talking about money

Family money conversations — script library by age

Most UK parents say they want to talk to their kids about money, but don't. The reasons: time, vocabulary, fear of "showing the books", worry about giving the wrong message. Here's a script library by age — the conversations that researchers find actually change financial behaviour.

Audience
Parents / grandparents
Reading time
10–12 min read
Topic
Family conversations
UK relevance
UK-wide
Tax year
2026/27
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

What this guide covers

Most UK parents talk to their kids about money far less than they think. The Money & Pensions Service shows financial behaviour at 18 is shaped far more by ages 5–12 conversations than by formal school lessons. This guide gives age-banded scripts: 5 = choices and waiting; 8 = saving and trade-offs; 11 = earning and tax; 14 = first job and scams; 18 = wrapping up the JISA conversation.

Why the conversations matter more than the lessons

The Money & Pensions Service's longitudinal research, the Financial Education Planning Framework, and the EEF's Education Endowment Foundation evidence base all converge on the same finding: children's financial behaviour at 18 is shaped more by family conversations between ages 5 and 12 than by formal financial-education lessons at school.

The mechanism: financial concepts (delay of gratification, opportunity cost, value vs price) are habits and intuitions, not facts. They're learned by repeated practice in real situations — the supermarket checkout, the pocket-money decision, the holiday-budget conversation — rather than from a textbook.

This means: even if you don't feel "qualified" to teach money, you're already doing it through every choice you discuss out loud. The script library below makes that more deliberate.

Age 5–7 — choices and waiting

The vocabulary children this age need: need, want, save, wait, choice, cost, swap. The big concept: delay of gratification.

Script 1 — The supermarket trade.

Script 2 — The piggy bank wait.

Script 3 — The "where does money come from?" question.

Age 8–10 — saving and trade-offs

Vocabulary: budget, plan, goal, save, spend, give, share, total, change. Concept: spending is allocation.

Script 4 — The three-pot pocket money.

Script 5 — The shopping basket challenge.

Script 6 — The "saving for something specific" project.

Age 11–13 — earning, tax, fairness

Vocabulary: earn, wage, tax, NHS, council, interest, charity, bank account. Concepts: where money comes from at scale; what money pays for at society scale.

Script 7 — The first payslip dissection.

Script 8 — The first bank account.

Script 9 — Why we pay tax (the fairness conversation).

Age 14–16 — first job, scams, big choices

Vocabulary: net pay, hours, contract, scam, mule, ID, credit, debit, deposit. Concepts: protecting yourself; thinking about post-16 routes; the value of time.

Script 10 — The "first paycheck split."

Script 11 — The money-mule warning.

Script 12 — The post-16 conversation.

Age 17–18 — the handover

Concept: full financial adulthood is six months away. The JISA, the savings, the bank account become theirs entirely. See the dedicated 18th-birthday handover guide for the six-month framework. Two scripts here:

Script 13 — The "what would past-you regret?" conversation.

Script 14 — The "open the LISA together" moment.

The single most useful family-finance habit: a quarterly 20-minute "family money check-in." Not a lecture. Just a status update: what changed, what's new, any questions. Quarterly because annual is too rare to build habits, and monthly is too often to feel real. Quarterly is conversational.
Cite this guide
UK Tax Drag (2026). Family money conversations — script library by age. Parent guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/parent-family-money-conversations.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0). CC BY 4.0.
Not financial or legal advice. This guide explains how the UK system works for educational purposes only. Rules can change between Budgets. Always check current thresholds on gov.uk and consider talking to a qualified financial adviser or solicitor before making significant decisions involving children’s money, trusts or inheritance planning.