Skip to Content

WoW Insider is getting ready for BlizzCon!

My 5-year-old opens a savings account -- you can, too

More
Text SizeAAA

Filed under: Banks, Banking-savings-account

Piggy bankAs with too many lessons I try to teach my daughter, now 5, I end up caving in and the lesson I set out to instill is lost.

We'll see if it turns out the same way with her savings account we recently opened together, but it couldn't have been a strong lesson in how to save money when immediately after leaving the bank, we went to a store where I bought her a promised toy.

I'll get back to the toy spending in a bit, but first I'd like to focus on the good part of that afternoon -- opening a savings account in her name in an effort to teach her about saving money.

I felt like the banker in "Mary Poppins," explaining how "tuppence" multiply:




My wife and I opened a college savings account for Emma a few months after she was born, so she should at least have a head start on paying for college when classes start in 13 years. It's an account we contribute to regularly each month.

But the goal for Emma's savings account is for it to be a start for her saving plan -- whether for college, a car, clothes or whatever she wants to buy. Hopefully it will be a long-term goal. It's also a way to slowly build up the money she gets from grandparents and birthdays, with at least half of those gifts going into the savings account.

I forgot how easy it is to open a savings account. With more people saving during the recession, it's a habit that's easy to start. Economists may argue that saving won't help the economy - that people need to spend - but saving for a rainy day never hurts.

Only Emma's Social Security number and signature were required. We could have opened the account without her signature, and used mine instead, but my kindergarten student dutifully printed her first and last name.

To open an account required $25, which dad happily contributed to start her off. Emma deposited $2.02 - 2 cents from a drawer where she keeps rocks and other jewels she finds, including pennies, and $2 she earned from her dentist the previous day for turning in two pounds of Halloween candy.

With $27.02 in her savings account on opening day, we attempted to discuss with her why she should save her money. She has a piggy bank at home that she occasionally puts coins into, but a bank is better, I explained, because it will pay her to keep her money in the bank.

I don't think she understood it, so I tried explaining how, if she gave the bank her money to hold, she could save her money and buy a bigger and better toy or whatever else later on. She kept asking me why she would want to wait to buy a toy later when she could buy it now.

My response was that the toy she saved up for could be better and bigger and cost more money than something she could afford now. It didn't sink in, and I don't expect it will until she starts learning the value of a dollar and how much things cost.

That leads me to the toy. Emma reminded me that last year when we turned most of her Halloween candy over to the dentist, we went out and bought a toy as a reward for giving up her candy. I made the mistake of adding a few dollars to her take from the dentist, buying her a toy truck that she wouldn't have been able to afford.

With the memory that only a child can have, she pulled that out this year and I promised to again buy her a toy after going to the dentist's office for the trade-in. So after going to the bank to open her savings account, she reminded me of my promise of a toy, since she had done her part and turned her candy in.

I caved, and she won twice: A new toy costing much more than the $2 she got from the dentist, and getting to keep her $2 in her savings account.

It wasn't the greatest financial lesson I could have taught my daughter, but it was a start. If the grandparents keep giving her money, putting at least half of it in her savings account is a lesson I'm going to have to learn.

Aaron Crowe is a freelance journalist in the San Francisco Bay Area who can be reached at www.AaronCrowe.net



Subscribe to Walletpop

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

How Much Should I Save?

$
$
%
Vote Now For the Readers' Choice Best in Food Awards
Nominations have been received and vetted for the best-of-breed in gourmet grocers, online gourmet ...
Zingerman's Bakehouse: Artisan Bread and Pastry from Ann Arbor
Zingerman's Bakehouse of Ann Arbor, Michigan, is nominated for a Luxist Award in the best bread ...

Jason Cochran
Jason Cochran Filed under: Bargains, Extracurriculars, Transportation, Travel, Celebs & Money

On board the new Oasis of the Seas: Is it worth the money?

So here I am, writing this from off the coast of Florida as part of the first two-day preview cruise of the magnificent Oasis of the Seas. Royal Caribbean has launched the largest cruise ship in the ...
Geoff Williams
Geoff Williams Filed under: Credit cards

Citigroup holds its customers hostage

Across the nation, Citibank credit card holders are receiving what pretty much amounts to a ransom note: We're going to raise your rates, says the letter, in so many words, but if you spend more ...
Bonnie McCarthy
Bonnie McCarthy Filed under: Budgets, Kids and Money, Saving Money, Technology

Family budgets: Make movie night safe again with family-friendly review sites

Around my house, we don't make the decision to pile into the car and head over to our local Cineplex as easily as we once did. It costs a lot of money these days to see talking animals, wild things ...
Madhusmita Bora
Madhusmita Bora Filed under: Transportation

Shop the friendly skies? The airlines are hoping you'll buy while in the sky

Along with sandwiches and soda, you may one day be able to buy tickets to Lion King and Animal Kingdom while cruising 35,000 feet above ground. A New York Times story reported that the airline ...

Banking Tools

Use these bank account calculators and tools to help you make the smartest bank account moves.

    Headlines from WalletPop Partners