Learning aim
Pupils can add prices of items, compare a total to a budget, and decide what to buy when they can't have everything.
National Curriculum links
- Maths Y1: Money: solve simple practical problems involving money
- Maths Y2: Money: find different combinations of coins, add and subtract amounts of money to give change
- PSHE Association KS1 L8: about the role money plays in their lives
What you'll need
- Classroom shop set up with priced items (cards or real items with labels): apple 30p, banana 25p, sandwich £1.50, juice 80p, sticker pack £1, pencil 50p, crisps 75p, biscuit 40p
- Shopping list worksheet with budget box (£5 for stretch, £3 for support)
- Calculators optional for stretch group
- Shopping basket worksheet
Lesson structure (45 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Use a £2 budget and round-number prices (50p, £1, etc.). Provide pre-cut item cards pupils can physically lay out.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Use a £10 budget with extra items. Pupils must include at least 4 items and calculate the change exactly. Bonus: find two different baskets that cost exactly the same.
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: use only items priced in 10p increments to simplify mental addition. Provide a number line on the worksheet. For pupils with autism: provide a structured template with item names already written, and pupils tick the ones they want.
EAL support
Vocabulary card: "budget", "total", "change", "shop", "basket", "afford". Sentence stem: "I put ___ in my basket. The total is ___. My change is ___."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) add 3 or more prices to find a total; (2) compare the total to a budget; (3) calculate how much money is left over. Mini-plenary check: I call out a basket (3 items), pupils show me the total on their mini-whiteboard.
Homework pack
Three real-world shopping maths activities. 15-20 minutes total.
Receipt explorer
What pupils do: With a parent, look at a real shopping receipt at home. Find any 3 items and write down what they cost. Add up the 3 prices.
Expected output: A list of 3 items with prices and a total.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per item, 1 mark for a correct total. 4 marks total.
Pretend basket
What pupils do: Pretend you have £5 to spend. Draw a basket with 3-4 items you would buy. Add up the prices to check you stay under £5.
Expected output: A drawing with prices and a total under £5.
Marking guidance: 1 mark for each correctly priced item, 2 marks if the total is correct and under £5.
Most for your money
What pupils do: Pick any 2 fruits in your house. Ask a parent how much each costs. Which one gives you more food for the price? Explain in one sentence.
Expected output: Two prices and a one-sentence comparison.
Marking guidance: 1 mark for each price, 2 marks for a sensible comparison.
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: Make up a "shop" at home with 5 priced items (real or pretend). Ask a parent to "buy" 3 items and pay the total. Did they pay the right amount?
Expected output: A note about the items, prices, what was bought, and the total paid.
Marking guidance: Open-ended. Up to 4 marks for accurate pricing and totaling.
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Next time you go shopping with a grown-up, find 1 item that costs less than £1 and 1 that costs more than £10. Notice how different prices can be.
Classroom safeguarding
Related lesson plans
- Counting money — making different totals (KS1 · Year 1 / Year 2)
- Comparison shopping — finding the best deal (KS2 · Year 5)
- All KS1 + KS2 lesson plans →