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Teaching Teens to Budget – Update

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Just over six months ago, I wrote a post about an interesting parenting tactic for helping teach teens how to budget.

At the time I wrote about it in a generic “what an interesting concept” type of way, but also thought my kids were still too young for that.

Smash cut to today.

I allowed my kids to get on Facebook when they entered 8th grade, and they’ve been sending me Facebook reels about this exact same concept. If you haven’t read that previous post, the idea is basically this: you figure out how much you typically spend on your child, average it out per month, give it to them, and let them learn to budget and spend it wisely.

So I already had this in the back of my head. As in, yes, I think this is a good idea (or some modified version).

And then – TRAGEDY STRUCK (a bit euphemistic here). 

As my teens were getting ready for school, one of my girls RIPPED HER JEANS and was left in a puddle of tears crying, “I HAVE NOTHING TO WEAR!” 

This was very frustrating for me, given that her drawers are overflowing with clothes, including SEVEN different pairs of jeans.

Am I the only one who has found that sometimes I’ll take my kids clothing shopping, they find something they love…and then they never wear its home? Just me?

I can’t think of much I hate more than realizing my kid has outgrown something that is still BRAND NEW WITH TAGS ON!

So with all these thoughts swirling in my mind I decided it’s time.

I’m giving the girls their own budget.

In my prior Teaching Teens to Budget blog post, the idea was to give kids money for everything kid-related (e.g., sports registration fees, entertainment and fun, school events and extra-curriculars). But that felt like too much too soon. And, honestly, none of those things are the real problem. Our problem is classic teen girl stuff: makeup and clothes.

Image source: Ron Lach/Pexels

Here’s my plan:

KIDS BUY:

Clothing & Accessories

  • 100% of all clothes, including:
  • Shirts, tops
  • Pants, jeans, shorts, skirts, bottoms
  • Bras & panties & socks
  • Tennis shoes, dress shoes, flip flops, boots, sandals, crocs
  • Any accessories, including belts, jewelry, hair bows, scrunchies, etc.
  • Pajamas/sleepwear
  • Swimsuits and cover ups
  • Jackets, hoodies, sweaters
  • Hats & sunglasses
  • Purses/bags/wallets
  • Costume or special outfits (e.g., spirit week, themed days, holiday, school dance)

Makeup & Skincare

  • 100% of all makeup and skincare, including any associated items
  •  primer, setting spray, makeup, clips or thing to pull hair back, etc.
  • Face or lip masks
  • Makeup remover wipes
  • Acne patches
  • Makeup brushes or sponges
  • Nail polish, remover, files, etc.

Toiletries

  • Fancy shampoos and conditioners
  • Hair masks
  • Hair dye and related items
  • Fancy hand soap, lotion, or body wash
  • Styling products (gel, mousse, curl cream, heat protectant)
  • Dry shampoo
  • perfume/body spray
  • Fancy lotions
  • Bath bombs, bubble bath

 

MOM BUYS

Clothing & Accessories

  • NONE

Makeup & Skincare

  • NONE

Toiletries

  • Basic deodorant
  • Basic hand soap, lotion, and body wash
  • Razors
  • Tooth brushes
  • Mouthwash or floss
  • Sunscreen
  • Feminine hygiene products

Setting the Ground Rules

I’ve typed up a simple contract where we all agree to terms. No borrowing. No advances. When the money is gone for a month, it’s gone. 

We can check in periodically and talk through whether adjustments are needed.

How much money are we talking about

I budget pretty meticulously, but I budget at the household level. I don’t break spending out per child. It’s just “clothing” or “household,” not whose item it was.

Because of that, I wasn’t totally sure what made sense.

My initial guess was $75 per child per month. Some months we spend very little – $50 or less. Other months (hello back-to-school) are much more expensive, especially once shoes are involved.

After doing some Googling, I found USDA estimates suggest families spend closer to $100 per month per teenager on clothing – and that doesn’t even include makeup or hair products.

I am comfortable starting  with $100/month/teen.

At first that felt like a big jump. But this isn’t new money. It’s money I’m already spending – just re-allocated into a new budget line called Teen Budget.

This isn’t a raise. It’s a reshuffle.

What I think Will Happen

I absolutely expect both kids to immediately want to spend the entire $100 on a couple cute tops and a pair of jeans, and then realize they’re out of money when mascara runs out.

But I actually think that kind of small failure can be a valuable learning experience,

I’m already coaching them to think ahead about larger expenses. They’re starting in a good place (i.e., stocked up on makeup and plenty of clothes), which gives them room to save toward a solid back-to-school haul in July (school starts in August).

Final Thoughts

So…wish me luck. What do you think? Is $100 too much or too little? Is 13 too young? 

Parenting is wild. It’s the most important job,  but there’s no rule book and every kid is different! I’m cautiously optimistic for this little experiment. I’m hopeful that any missteps become learning moments. And hopefully the missteps will be few and far-between.

The Least Romantic but Most Loving Thing I’m Doing This February

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As I have finally decided to make my move to Texas official, I’ve realized it’s also time to do something incredibly responsible: Update my “If Something Happens to Me” file. This is not morbid. This is not pessimistic. This is not me assuming the worst. This is me acknowledging that I am a 50-something single woman with a life, accounts, responsibilities, and children who should not be left playing detective if something goes sideways.

Moving states is a natural checkpoint. Addresses change. Laws change. And the mental note that says “I should probably take care of that” officially expires.

This isn’t about planning to disappear. It’s about planning not to leave a mess.

Why This Matters (More Than People Admit)

If something happens to me, I do not want my my kids:

  • locked out of accounts;
  • guessing at passwords;
  • digging through paperwork;
  • or arguing with institutions that require very specific forms.

I love them too much for that.

So yes, I’m doing the boring, grown-up thing. And I’m calling it self-love.

The First 5 Things I’m Documenting (In This Order)

Not everything. Not all at once. Just the things that matter most.

1. Beneficiaries (Because These Override Everything)

This is the big one.

I’m checking and updating beneficiaries on:

  • retirement accounts
  • bank accounts
  • any life insurance

Because no matter what your will says, beneficiary forms usually win. If the wrong person is listed, that’s who gets the money. Full stop.

This step alone can prevent absolute chaos.

2. My Trusted Person (Yes, I Have to Tell Them)

Someone needs to know how to step in if needed.

So I’m re-evaluating:

  • who that person is,
  • whether they’re still the right choice,
  • and making sure they actually know.

No hints. No assumptions. No “they’ll figure it out.”

3. A Simple “Here’s Where Everything Is” List

Not passwords. Not instructions for running my life.

Just:

  • bank names
  • investment accounts
  • insurance companies
  • recurring bills
  • where my password manager lives

Enough to reduce panic. Enough to provide a starting point.

4. Basic Documents in One Place

Not scattered. Not “I think it’s in a drawer somewhere.” This is a organized, tabbed, 3 ring binder that while I don’t look at it often, it holds the keys to everything. And it’s definitely time, I went through and made sure it’s all up to date.

At minimum:

  • ID
  • Social Security card
  • insurance info
  • any existing legal documents

One folder. Physical or digital. Labeled clearly. Boring in the best way.

5. A Texas Reality Check

Because state lines matter.

As part of the move, I’m reviewing:

  • whether existing documents still apply
  • what needs updating under Texas law
  • what I should create if I haven’t yet

This isn’t an overnight project. It’s a “start being intentional” project.

The Part No One Likes to Talk About

This kind of planning doesn’t feel urgent-until it is.

But doing it now means:

  • fewer decisions later
  • less stress for the people I love
  • and proof that I take my own life seriously

This isn’t morbid.

It’s responsible.
It’s thoughtful.
And honestly? It’s one of the most self-loving financial moves I can make.

If you’re in a season of transition-moving, simplifying, or just realizing you don’t want to leave loose ends-this is your nudge.

Start small.
Document the basics.
And give yourself credit for doing the grown-up thing.

Even if it’s wildly unromantic.

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