By Trisha Good, Executive Director, Ohio Tuition Trust Authority
January 21, 2025
As we settle into the new year, is one of your resolutions improving your family’s financial health? If so, there are many ways for everyone to learn healthy money habits. Here are some ideas for how to save as a family and have fun while doing it.
Board games
Board games are a fun way to learn valuable life lessons. Choose ones that teach basic principles of personal finance, like the Game of Life, Pay Day, or Monopoly. Some games specifically focus on money management techniques like Cash Flow 101. For a more comprehensive list of board games to teach personal finance skills at different ages, this article lists 53 options. As your family plays these games together, your children can learn core financial concepts to help them in the future.
Books
Reading with your child or grandchild builds their language skills. Reading age-appropriate money books together builds their understanding of how money works and how they can make money work for them. It also allows them to ask questions of you, which can demystify talking about finances with them and can allow for more open communication. And reading these books together also allows you to brush up on your financial basics as well. Here are some money books with which to begin.
Learning how to save
If your children are young, introduce them to basic budgeting concepts with spend, save, and share jars. They can watch how Elmo from Sesame Street saves in those three jars. After earning money from their allowance or completing chores, talk to them about the value of saving now so they can use it later.
For teenagers, show them how to set up a budget to pay for their smartphone, buy gas, or save for their education after high school. Another idea is to give your teenagers money to get school clothes money once per year so they can choose how to spend the funds. This way, they can see how much or how little they can buy, depending on their own personal spending decisions. It’s better to learn what things really cost now to set their financial priorities better later in life.
Parent Magazine also offers guidance on money lessons to teach your children at every age.
Set and incentivize savings goals
Talk to your children about something they would like to have, like a new phone or video game. Then, help them come up with a plan to reach their savings goals. By breaking down their savings goals into small chunks based on their allowance or summer job, they can learn how to budget and then track their progress.
To keep them motivated, you can offer incentives for when they reach new levels with their savings goal. It can be something small like an ice cream cone if they are younger, or you can offer to pitch in a defined dollar amount once they have reached a certain percentage of their goal.
Saving in a 529 plan
Let your children know you are saving for their college and career training. You don’t need to share the dollar amount saved in your 529 account, but you should set your expectations with them–that they will be continuing their education after high school.
Research from the Institute for Higher Education Policy shows that when children know that there are college savings set aside for them, they are much more likely to expect to attend college. In fact, children with $1-$499 in college savings are three times more likely to attend college and four times more likely to graduate than those with no savings.
529 plans are for whatever school comes after high school for your children and grandchildren. Funds in a 529 account can be used tax-free for qualified higher education expenses at four-year colleges or universities, two-year community colleges, trade or vocational schools, apprenticeships, or certificate programs. So, your children can go to a school where their interests, talents, and skills lie.
To learn more about 529 plans, visit My State’s 529 Plan on College Savings Plans Network’s website to learn about all the tax advantages and benefits of saving in your home state’s 529 college and career training program.
About the author:
Trisha Good is the executive director of Ohio Tuition Trust Authority. Since 1989, Ohio Tuition Trust Authority has sponsored and administered Ohio’s 529 College Savings Program, CollegeAdvantage. Ohio’s 529 Plan oversees more than 678,700 accounts and over $18.2 billion in assets as of December 31, 2024. Visit CollegeAdvantage.com or call 1-800-AFFORD-IT (233-6734) for more information.