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Parenting a preteen can be a minefield. Find support here.

Preteens

How much pocket money do you give?

42 replies

CeliaFate · 13/06/2012 09:01

How much do you give your pre-teen? My nearly 12 year old gets £10 on the first of the month to last the month.

With that she can buy what she likes.

I know it's not much but I pay for clothes, cinema trips, toiletries etc. so all she has to buy out of that is whatever takes her fancy.

If she's going shopping with a friend I give her £10 on top.

Trouble is, it's not teaching her to budget. She is like me Blush - if she has the money in her purse she'll spend it. I give her £3 a day for school dinners, but I have to give it daily as she hates having £15 in her purse in case she overspends.

What would you do?

OP posts:
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andiem · 13/06/2012 09:05

Mine gets 30 a month into a bank account that has a debt card. If he wants to go out etc he has to pay for it, he also has to buy presents etc from it and clothes that I wouldn't normally want to buy him. Curently he has £150 in his account! Am thinking of stopping it for a bit.

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FernieB · 13/06/2012 13:07

£15 per month. I pay for 'essential' clothes only i.e. when I think they have enough in their wardrobes I stop buying until they grow out of stuff. If they want any other clothes, they save up.

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cory · 13/06/2012 15:35

Same as you for my Yr 7 child, Celia, but for that ds has to buy non-essential toiletries and clothes - we keep him in basics but any extras are for him to buy.

He doesn't get more to go shopping with; the point of the allowance imo is that once he spent it, he can't go shopping. Though I will sometimes give him bus money, in a situation where a driving parent might have offereded a lift.

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ChopstheDuck · 13/06/2012 15:44

I give dd £10 a week, but her days out etc do have to come out of this too - trips to the cinema, swimming etc.

I pay her phone bill and buy essential clothes, if she wants yet another dress that she really doesn't need, she has to pay half. She has a debit card, but still not got round to actually using it.

andiem, you are thinking of stopping it because he has saved?! That's one way to put him off saving for life!

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nosleepwithworry · 13/06/2012 15:52

ds aged 8 gets a fiver every Friday BUT he has to do his jobs to earn this. If he doesnt, he does not get paid.

Learning about budgeting started when he was 5ish. He was asking for stuff from the Argos catalogue. I made him cut it out, put it on the fridge and save up with his wages.
He does it naturally now. Its worked well for us.

But then, me & DH are good savers and have a very healthy philosophy, so its kinda normal in our house.

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hattifattner · 13/06/2012 15:56

DS gets £25 a month in a bank account. He has a cash point card with it. He also gets his phone contract (£10 capped). From his money, he usually pays me about £10 for lost sports kit Grin and the rest goes on cinema/sweets etc.

I am very hard with him about kit - he has everything he needs and will get new stuff when he outgrows it, but I'm buggered if I'll pay for yet another water bottle or yet another pair of goggles that he has lost.

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bronze · 13/06/2012 15:59

My lot get twice their age x 2 plus 10p so ds age 9 gets £1.90 a week
I feel like Scrooge but its more than I get to spend I myself

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Smurfy1 · 13/06/2012 21:48

DD is 10 and gets £5.00 a week IF she is good etc, but we buy everything for her so its just hers to save up etc

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andiem · 14/06/2012 21:17

Chops he has a savings account as well I won't say how much is in that!

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BackforGood · 14/06/2012 21:32

You'll find this is one of those 'how long is a piece of string' questions - we are all so different.
In primary school mine got 10p per week, per year of age (7 yr old got 70p a week, 11 yr old got £1.10 per week). Once in secondary, mine get the amount per month they are for their age (15 yr old gets £15/month, and 13 yr old gets £13 per month).
That's it then - no giving them extra if they go shopping / pictures / bowling / ice-skating - that's how they learn to budget.
We do pay all subs for things they belong to, but they fund their own phones. They don't have to buy any clothes or toiletries though. They get £2.10 a day pocket money and I know dd1 saves bits out of that.

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foolonthehill · 14/06/2012 22:01

you are not scrooge...all my DCs get 50p per week Sad it's theirs to do what they want with....but it's not much is it. Can't even buy a comic without saving up Sad Sad

but they never, ever complain.
and the pound shop is our friend Grin

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frenchfancy · 17/06/2012 07:50

DD - 11 yr old - gets 2.50? per week then can earn more on top. We have our own business so she does little bits of work for the business and gets paid for it. She recently managed to save up 100? for a camera.

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VivaLeBeaver · 17/06/2012 07:52

My 11yo dd gets £22 a month. Goes into her bank acc by direct debit and she has a cash card.

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Mama1980 · 17/06/2012 07:55

I give my 14 year old dd 40£ a month into her debit account, with this she pays for cinema, any clothes that are non essential ie I buy underwear, jeans, tshirts etc but if she wants a dress she buys it. She gets 20£ a month on her phone pay as you go and any extra she covers-it's amazing how the bills have come down since we started this arrangement Grin she buys any music DVDs etc etc.She also buys her own presents -if feel this is important the money isn't just for her but for her to do nice things with iyswim- seems to be working pretty well plus she feels grown up with her 'own' money and card.

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InMySpareTime · 17/06/2012 08:04

My DCs (10&8) do jobs to earn money. They have a "price list" they decided the prices for:
Polishing shoes 15p a pair
Washing 30p a load
Vacuuming 10p a room
Sweeping 10p a room
Mopping 15p a room
Clean sinks 15p each
Dishwasher load & unload 20p

They can spend this money as they choose (usually on sweets).I pay subs and they generally get clothes bought by grandparents. I save £75 a month each for them in a tracker fund, and they have 30 day notice savings accounts for birthday money (they are not interested in shopping yet so have a fair amount in thereGrin)

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janinlondon · 21/06/2012 16:17

£40 a month transferred into her account. She has a debit card and has to buy her own train tickets and phone top ups. She is getting the idea of how to save on those by calculating whether or not a monthly/weekly/daily ticket is the right thing to buy etc. Handing her money (which she would prefer) is not an option.

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HarriettJones · 21/06/2012 16:24

10yo gets £2 a week

12 to gets £20 a month into her bank. Pays for treats & days out. Often pays for phone too.

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mathwi · 24/06/2012 16:57

Been reading this thread with interest :) We're due to move back to the UK this summer, after living abroad for the last 10 years. Our eldest has just turned 12 and we have been discussing pocket money etc. I'm really surprised about some 12 year olds having their own bank account and debit cards, is this common? Just interested to hear in case we'll get the normal "all my friends have it" when we're back :)
TIA

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janinlondon · 25/06/2012 11:25

Mathwi - I don't think you'll get the "Everyone ELSE has one" line on debit cards Smile, but if they have to take the train (or in our case two trains) to school and back every day, and by extension they have to have a phone, they need some means of paying for those things. If they have their own card they can take the responsibility for those couple of things. I think it is a valuable lesson in budgeting.

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AnnaRack · 25/06/2012 13:38

DD (8) doesn't get any money but then she doesn't ask for any either. She is still quite innocent about money. She will cotton onto it soon enough, so not in any hurry re pocket money. I think in our case maybe age 9 or 10 would b a good time to start.

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slalomsuki · 25/06/2012 20:44

Mine earn money by doing odd jobs round the house on a price list basis. The eldest is trying to prove to me he can save up for a mobile phone contract so he can get one when he goes to senior school in September. He is doing well so far but we do have to resort to bribery sometimes.

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mathwi · 26/06/2012 07:19

janinlondon, glad to hear it :) Think I was around 16 years old when I got my first debit card, so thought 12 sounded young :) But I see what you mean about having to take trains etc. Guess it might work as well in terms of learning to budget and take responsibility. Definitely something to think about. Next will be how much pocket money to give :)

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HecateAdonaea · 26/06/2012 07:24

My 11 (nearly 12) year old gets £5 a week and my (just turned) 13 yr old gets £6 a week. It goes directly into their bank accounts and they tend to save it up to buy something big every now and again.

If they had it in cash, they'd just waste it on sweets and plastic rubbish Grin

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HecateAdonaea · 26/06/2012 07:28

Oh, but if you are wanting to teach her to budget, then you have to stop protecting her from the consequences of overspending.

This means giving her the £15 and letting her be responsible for it - and if she blows it - she has to make herself a sandwich to take into school.

Give her her toiletries allowance - work up to giving her the cash for all her things as one allowance from which she has to buy her clothes, toiletries and pay for her social life!

She will fail at first. She will overspend and go without.

but she will learn.

Better that than only starting to learn about budgeting when you have rent to pay and food to buy and you spent your council tax money on a funky new dress!

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Bellbird · 26/06/2012 12:57

Having an account means that elderly relatives can give my dd cheques which makes their lives easier and her a free reign in what to get.

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