Before You Swipe: Important Training Tips
Open communication is the cornerstone of financial education. Hopefully you’ve been talking to your teen about money since they were small children, laying a solid financial foundation. If not, there’s still time. Be open with your teen about your values, goals, and expectations around money. Be honest about your own financial journey, the mistakes you've made, and the lessons you've learned. Hopefully they’ll learn from your experiences, and save themselves pain down the road.
Financial Literacy is a Journey
As your teen begins to use their card, continue to communicate. Address any questions or concerns they have promptly and openly. Since there’s a good chance your name is also on their card or account, any financial trouble they get into will come back to you, so be sure you’re talking through your teen’s decisions and addressing any concerns promptly
Setting Boundaries
Establish spending limits, due dates, and consequences for missed payments, but also explain the reasoning behind your guidelines.
You should also address some of the potential challenges your teen might face, including how to respond:
- Impulse purchases—impulsive spending can quickly lead to trouble with either overdraft fees or maxed out cards.
- Peer pressure to overspend—however cliché it might sound, peer pressure can have significant influence on your teen’s behavior.
- Online scams and phishing attempts—learning how to stay safe from fraudsters and protecting their financial information is a major milestone in their financial literacy journey.
- Losing a card—if their card is lost or stolen, they need to know to act quickly to report the loss.
Celebrate successes
Recognize responsible spending habits and positive financial decisions. Celebrating the good choices your teen makes will go a long way toward keeping those lines of communication open.
Learning from mistakes
Use mistakes as teaching opportunities, encouraging them to learn from their missteps and showing them how to recover responsibly. This is a good time to share your own money mistakes and how you corrected them.
Adjusting the training wheels
Gradually loosen restrictions as your teen demonstrates responsible behavior. Hopefully, by the time they’re ready to leave the nest, they’ll be well on their way to a financially sound future.