20 Meaningful Saving and Budgeting Activities for High School Students

Teach teens financial fitness now so they have a prosperous future.

If we let students graduate high school without learning key skills like saving and budgeting, we’re doing them a real disservice. These budgeting activities are terrific for a life-skills class, morning meeting discussion, or advisory group unit. Give teens the knowledge they need to make smart financial choices now and in the future.

1. Try the Jellybean Game

Printable budgeting activities worksheets with a bowl of colorful jellybeans

Before you get into the nitty-gritty of numbers, start with this clever activity that gives kids practice allocating assets in a low-stakes way. They’ll use jellybeans to decide what they need, want, and can truly afford.

Learn more: The Jellybean Game/Pretty Providence

2. Use budget-planning worksheets

Portion of a printable spending tracker for teens to use to learn about budgeting

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has developed lots of tools to help teens and adults learn to manage money. Show kids how to use their Income Tracker, Spending Tracker, Bill Calendar, and Budget Worksheet (all at the link below). Start by having kids consider their current financial situation. Then, give them hypothetical “adult” situations to plan for, with income and expenses drawn from typical people in your area.

Learn more: Budgeting Worksheet Tools/CFPB

3. Create a buying plan

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Portion of a printable budget activities worksheet with a table to help students make a plan for buying something they want

This activity encourages kids to think about purchases, especially major ones. Saving money is just one part of the process—they also need to consider what makes a good purchase, and whether they should pay up front or borrow the money instead.

Learn more: Create a Buying Plan/CFPB

4. Practice grocery shopping

Screenshot from The Fresh Market's website showing a selection of egg options

Most kids probably have no idea how much groceries cost. Use grocery store websites to your advantage, and have kids take a virtual “shopping trip.” They can plan meals and determine what they’ll need to buy. Or have them start with a weekly food budget and work backwards from there. Either way, remind them to make sure their menus include healthy options.

Learn more: Make a Healthy Grocery List/WebMD

5. Build a savings “first-aid kit”

Part of a printable worksheet to help kids plan for financial emergencies

It’s no secret that things can and do go wrong. Budgeting activities like this one help students learn what to do when unexpected expenses crop up. Students learn about real-world costs and come up with ways to save in advance and adjust on the fly.

Learn more: Savings “First Aid Kit”/CFPB

6. Discover what jobs actually pay

Screenshot from Career Profiles showing the average salaries for Elementary school teachers

Ask students to list some jobs they think they’d like to do someday. Then, have them research average salaries for those jobs. Encourage them to factor in where they plan to live (salary ranges can be dramatically different across the country). Plus, ask them to think about the education they’ll need to land those jobs, and how long it will take them to earn the money to pay back any loans they’ll have to take.

Learn more: Career Profiles Job Salaries by Field

7. Play The Biggest Bang for Your Buck

Screenshot of an online budgeting game called The Biggest Bang For Your Buck, asking a question about financial literacy

This online game guides kids through a shopping trip, with financial literacy questions along the way. It’s simple but a terrific way to introduce a discussion on spending, saving, and budgeting.

Learn more: The Biggest Bang for Your Buck

8. Find out how credit cards work

Infographic showing the differences between credit and debit cards

Source: Investopedia

These days, most people pay with plastic instead of cash. Sometimes they use debit cards, but often they’re credit cards. If you’re going to use them, you need to know how they work. Divide your class into groups, and ask each to research a different question about credit cards, like how they work, what interest they charge, and how to use them safely.

Learn more: Credit Card Basics/Money Under 30

9. Experiment with different budget models

A pie chart and graph illustrating the 50/30/20 budget model

Source: Arizona Central Credit Union

There’s no one right way to set up a budget. Expose students to a variety of models, like proportional budgets, the “pay yourself first” model, the envelope budget, and more. Ask them to think about which kind of person each model works best for, and which one they’d choose.

Learn more: 6 Different Budgeting Methods/Young Adult Money

10. Claim Your Future

Screen shot from the Claim Your Future online game indicating your career is Real Estate Agent

This cool online game assigns you a career (or lets you choose one) and tailors your experience to your location. You get to make choices about housing and other expenses, and the game calculates how those things fit into a responsible budget.

Learn more: Claim Your Future

11. Calculate compound interest

Screenshot of a compound interest calculator tool used for budgeting activities

When you invest your money in an interest-bearing account, it earns money just by sitting there! That money can really grow over time too. Have students complete budgeting activities like looking up current interest rates and then calculating the potential interest from using those accounts for short and long periods of time. Explore local bank offerings, and take into account things like fees too.

Learn more: Compound Interest Calculator

12. Learn what “living expenses” means

3D pie chart showing budgeting guidelines breakdown for various living expenses categories

Source: My Money Coach

Kids generally don’t think about all the costs of daily living. Start by brainstorming a big list as a class of all the things people need to spend money on each month: rent or mortgage, car payments, credit card payments, food, entertainment, utilities, internet access, and more. Break kids into groups and have each group research the average costs of those items in your area. Come back together as a class and add up their findings to see what “living expenses” can really be.

Learn more: Monthly Expenses/Inspired Budget

13. Survive on a limited income

Screen shot from Spent, a budgeting game meant to demonstrate what it's like to live on the financial edge

Living on the financial edge is a sad reality for so many people. Show kids what that can feel like with this online simulation. When the game starts, you have no housing and no job, and just $1,000 in the bank. Can you get a job and make it to the end of the month?

Learn more: Spent

14. Get a reality check

Results from the JumpStart Reality Check, showing a person would need to make $18.41 per hour to meet their projected needs

Everybody’s got dreams, but how realistic are they? That’s where the Jump$tart Reality Check program comes in. By making choices about the future they want, teens will learn what they’ll need to earn to make it happen. The answers might really surprise them.

Learn more: Jump$tart Reality Check

15. Have a Misadventure

Screenshot of Misadventures in Money Management game for teens

This online game feels a bit like a graphic novel, and it helps kids learn the basics of budgeting and money management. Explore multiple topics and complete missions to learn valuable skills.

Learn more: Misadventures in Money Management

16. Reflect on needs vs. wants

Questions from a budgeting activities worksheet asking students to analyze needs vs wants

Ask students to reflect on what they truly need to survive vs. things that just make life easier or more fun. Budgeting activities like this can help them identify items they can eliminate when funds get really tight.

Learn more: Needs vs. Wants/CFPB

17. See the true costs of college

Screenshot from Payback online game showing the costs of college and student loan debt

College-bound kids might figure they’ll take loans now and figure out how to pay them back later, but do they really have a handle on the true costs? These interesting online simulations let you pick your school, then walk through four years of potential expenses and income opportunities to find out how you fare in the end.

Learn more: Payback

18. Learn to protect your money

List of 8 ways consumers can protect themselves against online scams and fraud

Source: Broadband Search

If teens don’t learn smart skills like avoiding phishing scams, how to choose good passwords, or identifying fraudulent sites, they can lose everything they save. Take time to learn about the most common fraud issues, and teach them how to be responsible online.

Learn more: 8 Ways To Protect Your Money That All Students Should Know

19. Make a living in the gig economy

Screenshot from The Uber Game, a budgeting game about working in the gig economy

Let students imagine life as an Uber driver. This game is based on actual Uber driver experiences and can be a real eye-opener.

Learn more: The Uber Game

20. Hit the Road

Screenshot from Hit the Road, a game to teach teens saving and budgeting skills

Think of this like Oregon Trail for the modern age. A group of friends is setting off on a cross-country trip, but they’ve got to manage their funds to get where they want to go. Try this one as a group activity so kids have to work together to make smart choices.

Learn more: Hit the Road

Budgeting activities are just the start! Check out these 24 Life Skills Every Teen Should Learn.

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Teach students how to plan for their financial futures with these fun saving and budgeting activities, with ideas for all skill levels.