Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Our 12yr old is involved in all financial planning, and is part of our monthly "state of the union" he knows how much we make, our debts, our investments, and our expenses that we track at the most tedious granular level.
I will tell you, we make just over 500k. He has been going over his Christmas list and was cringing when he told me he really wanted a laptop, but knew it was way too expensive a gift. His main list of things he wants totals about $350. He is very well grounded in what is appropriate spending and absolutely loves tracking our investments. He has been worried about our 401k performance as of late and that has caused him unnecessary worry. We do try to explain the cycles to ease his fears, but he will eventually see the cycle himself.
They had a personal finance unit at school and it was basically so far below his literacy level even he was laughing about it. I'm very confident our approach is right for our kids.
Our 9yr old is not involved, though, he will be once he turns 12.
I can't with this post. Where to begin.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Our 12yr old is involved in all financial planning, and is part of our monthly "state of the union" he knows how much we make, our debts, our investments, and our expenses that we track at the most tedious granular level.
I will tell you, we make just over 500k. He has been going over his Christmas list and was cringing when he told me he really wanted a laptop, but knew it was way too expensive a gift. His main list of things he wants totals about $350. He is very well grounded in what is appropriate spending and absolutely loves tracking our investments. He has been worried about our 401k performance as of late and that has caused him unnecessary worry. We do try to explain the cycles to ease his fears, but he will eventually see the cycle himself.
They had a personal finance unit at school and it was basically so far below his literacy level even he was laughing about it. I'm very confident our approach is right for our kids.
Our 9yr old is not involved, though, he will be once he turns 12.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Kids can't handle it. They will disclose.
We give our kids a general idea that we do well enough to afford a nice house, but we have to save for college and vacations, etc. I actually have a lot in savings, but don't want them to know we are well off.
I plan on disclosing financial info to them after they are in their own career in their 20's. That's when my single mom went over her finances with me- for will and estate purposes. That was the right time I think
As PPs noted, explaining expenses is more useful. I've told my elementary school kids that the mortgage is $4000/month. The car cost $30,000. We're saving for a trip to Disneyworld that will cost $10,000. and that without a college degree, they may end up working at McDonalds or retail for $15/hour, or $2400/month which isn't even enough for a cheap apartment, food, clothes and bus fare. so I tell them, their job is to do well in school.
If you have that kind of income, can't you easily go to Disney for a trip? We make less than you and could easily pay cash for a trip to Disney no issue but our mortgage is 1/2. That's a pretty grand trip for Disney. We've gone 10 days several times, including a cruise and never spent that much. $4k on a mortgage is high and then to turn around to tell them $15 an hour, which isn't minimum wage everywhere is setting them up big time.
Its not useful if you have a grand lifestyle as kids will not get it at a young age.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are toddlers so not yet! My parents never told us how much they made but my Dad had very big jobs running some well known companies. When they built a beautiful vacation home I realized they had done very well. When grandchildren arrived and they funded 529's for each baby for $100,000 I was stunned. But when we're growing up we lived in a nice neighborhood, went to public schools and took one nice vacation a year but never lived like 1 percenters.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think they need to know totals. They need to know about saving and investing. They need to know about how much things cost. They need to know that we have enough money to do x & y, but maybe not luxurious z.
My blue collar parents never shared any income or wealth totals...even now they don't share. They've alluded that they can cover their long-term healthcare costs, and they opened 529s for our kids, which they contribute about $5k / year each.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Kids can't handle it. They will disclose.
We give our kids a general idea that we do well enough to afford a nice house, but we have to save for college and vacations, etc. I actually have a lot in savings, but don't want them to know we are well off.
I plan on disclosing financial info to them after they are in their own career in their 20's. That's when my single mom went over her finances with me- for will and estate purposes. That was the right time I think
As PPs noted, explaining expenses is more useful. I've told my elementary school kids that the mortgage is $4000/month. The car cost $30,000. We're saving for a trip to Disneyworld that will cost $10,000. and that without a college degree, they may end up working at McDonalds or retail for $15/hour, or $2400/month which isn't even enough for a cheap apartment, food, clothes and bus fare. so I tell them, their job is to do well in school.
Anonymous wrote:Please teach your kids about finances. You can't do that without disclosing the details of your income. My parents did and I was able to put into perspective what it cost to have the type of lifestyle I wanted (we were upper middle class). So many people I grew up with had no concept of how expensive it is to simply live, let buy a home, travel, have kids etc. Without an understanding of what income it took, good or bad, to give them the lifestyle they grew up with, you're setting them up for failure.