Money saving tips for teens

There’s nothing sweeter than learning how to write your own pay check when you’re young.

The youth of South Africa represent the future lifeblood of our economy and building and empowering money savvy teens is an important start in creating responsible young adults.

To help you take good care of your money (which translates into taking good care of yourself), here are some savings tips especially designed for young people.

Pay attention
The first thing to “get” is that to always have money, you have to pay attention to it.

Try and keep track of your spending for a week or two. You will soon work out what type of money personality describes you:

If you’re one of the first two, you are definitely a spender and you might find that you are out of money more often than you’d like.

If you’re the third type, you’re probably a natural ‘saver’ and savers almost always have money for the things they need or want. This is a good thing.

If you are a spender, here are some specific saving tips to ensure you always have money for the things you need and want, too. Savers might want to do these too.

Track your spending
Most teens use debit cards to purchase their goods and lose track of just how much they are spending.

Keeping a record you can refer to often acts as a good handbrake and puts a check on unhealthy spending patterns before they become a problem. Find the tracking mechanism that works best for you.

Develop financial discipline
All over the web, there are tons of tips telling you not to carry very much cash. It’s assumed that if you don’t have it, you won’t spend it.

But the truth is you’ll actually spend more when you’re using your debit card or a credit card.

Here’s what to do:

Pay attention to your minutes and texts
In other words, know your phone plan.

If you are the one who’s responsible for your cell phone bill, and especially if you’re not, watch your minutes and texts.

You do not want to experience the shock of a higher than expected phone bill.

Keeping tabs on your minutes and texts help keep your phone bill in line each month and helps keep you in line with your parents too.

Take your own lunch
Taking your own lunch from home is a lot healthier and a whole lot less expensive than spending it all at the tuckshop.

Adults in financial trouble quickly admit that eating out is often their biggest mistake financially.

Once they stop eating out all of the time, it’s amazing at how easy it is to pay their other expenses and have a little money to save and invest each month.

If you start this money-saving habit now, you’ll be a lot less stressed later.

Teach yourself
You’ve probably learnt a little about money, saving and investing, creating businesses, in school or at home.

But if you really want to be financially successful in life, it’s up to you to teach yourself about these important topics and practice them in the real world.

Make your own money
Making money is different to earning money.

When you earn it, you are trading your time and energy for money.

You work an hour and get paid for an hour.

When you make it, you’re working lots of hours building businesses and then getting paid over and over and over again for that same hour.

There’s nothing sweeter than learning how to write your own pay check when you’re young.

By doing this, you’ll always be the CEO of your own life and you’ll never be dependent on a job.

Also read: How to tell if your teen is troubled

Underage drinking can be harmful

An icy breeze woke her from her deep sleep, and won her a competition

Follow us:

Instagram
Twitter
Facebook

 

Exit mobile version