| $250 a week |
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If I get pay for the chores i do in the house, i would be rich!
I told my kid if you do something that is for the family, something that benefit more than just yourself, than maybe I'll give you a buck or two. |
Why in god's name would a kid need 250 dollar a week?!?! |
Do you want your child dressing like a pauper? |
oh, you got me. A+ on trolling |
| $20 a week at 13. Some chores are part of household responsibilities but the allowance is for extra chores we agreed on. Also auto allocated into spend, save, give according to child’s predetermined amounts |
YouTube Channel or influencer are full time jobs to make almost $50,000 a year. Maybe a middle school dropout? |
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Give their age per week. Yes, they are expected to do chores to help around the house—take out trash & recycling, empty dishwasher, clean their bathroom.
Money is used for extras they want to have—going out to movies, food with friends, etc. We buy basic clothes, shoes, jacket, etc. But if they want something particularly expensive and beyond what I’m willing to pay, they would supplement. For example, I’ll buy a winter jacket from Lands End on sale for $85. If you have to have some tricked out jacket, I’ll contribute $85 and kid pays the rest. |
Same, and both my kids get 25 a week despite different ages (14 and 11 now). At first we did it according to age but then they pushed back and DH and I couldn't find a legitimate reason to base it on age. We based the amount on the amount I got as a teenager, adjusted for inflation. |
Oh and the reason we don't base it on chores (we got this idea from a parenting book) is that if they have to do chores to get allowance, it's too easy for them to say "okay, fine, I just won't do chores" and then it becomes a stupid battle. Easier to say "you get allowance so you learn to make choices with money, and you have to do your chores because you are a member of this family and we work together." |
| $20/week contingent on some chores. |