kidcashapp

120 posts

kidcashapp

kidcashapp

@kidcashapp

Teaching kids that money doesn't grow on trees 🌳💸 Fun allowance tracker for the whole family. 📲 https://t.co/X2NjBACzCY

Syracuse, NY Katılım Mart 2026
161 Takip Edilen21 Takipçiler
kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@TheManCBK_ Wild how rare this is now. The financial education gap got worse, not better.
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Emmanuel Chibuikem Edozieogo
Emmanuel Chibuikem Edozieogo@TheManCBK_·
There was a time brands actually cared about impact. I remember Cowbell sponsoring educational programs. MTN creating opportunities. Banks and financial institutions going into schools to teach children how to save money, manage finances, and even open accounts.
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@aboutthatwallet Think schools will ever close that gap, or is it always going to fall on parents?
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About That Wallet®️ Podcast
About That Wallet®️ Podcast@aboutthatwallet·
Schools teach algebra and science, but neglect personal finance. This oversight creates harmful habits as kids enter adulthood, unaware of financial realities. It's a critical gap in education. #PersonalFinance #Education
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@Northwest_Bank Starting them young changes everything. Habits at 7 turn into freedom at 27.
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Northwest Bank
Northwest Bank@Northwest_Bank·
Our Spirit Lake team had a blast teaching 2nd graders about saving and smart money choices through our Teach Children to Save initiative! Their excitement and curiosity made Financial Literacy Month extra special. Here’s to building strong money habits early! 🐷💡 Member FDIC
Northwest Bank tweet mediaNorthwest Bank tweet mediaNorthwest Bank tweet media
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@MarcLobliner Knowing how to keep money is the lesson nobody teaches. Worth way more than knowing how to make it.
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Marc Lobliner - IFBB Pro
Marc Lobliner - IFBB Pro@MarcLobliner·
Cars are a stupid investment most of the time. It’s one thing to have money, but my thought is to teach my kids how to keep money. Buy a house with a 25 year roof, a Japanese shit-box car….that’s freedom right there. My daughter got my hand me down Jeep Grand Cherokee (never buying non-Japanese again but it’s still going after some replaced parts) and my son got a Toyota Tacoma that will probably be running until 2098. This is all to show off on social media to people who don’t give a fuck about you. But I’m not judging, you do you. It’s just my way of doing things.
Richie Rich@gofishh77

If you could, would you buy your 16-year-old something this nice? Or would you start them off in a Honda or Toyota-type car until they can prove to be a responsible driver?

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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@Iam___Vivienne Financial education before the inheritance is the part most families skip.
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Dear__Reader
Dear__Reader@Iam___Vivienne·
We need to teach your kids' financial literacy early. Leaving an inheritance without a financial education is a recipe for squandered wealth. Prepare your heirs to manage the money. Don’t just prepare the money for your heirs. 📉➡️📈 #GenerationalWealth #Parenting
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kidcashapp retweetledi
Dream First Bank
Dream First Bank@DreamFirstBank·
A great way to teach kids about budgeting is with a simple challenge. Give your child $10 at a dollar store & let them decide how to spend it. They will quickly learn how choices affect what they can buy. Set the budget beforehand & see how creative they get with their spending!
Dream First Bank tweet media
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Arunima Ganguly 🇮🇳
Arunima Ganguly 🇮🇳@ArunimaGanguly2·
@Mohitpareek_22 they should talk about finance from early age. I knew our family did not have much money, which is why I did not spend unnecessary. i will be teaching my kid as well.
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Mohit Pareek
Mohit Pareek@Mohitpareek_22·
Families in India rarely talk about money. Parents hide debts, children don’t know how to manage salary, and suddenly one generation passes huge financial burden to the next. No one teaches budgeting, saving, or investing at home.
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@Vitabu247 Number 7 hits hardest. Money conversations at home shape everything.
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Learners Bookshop
Learners Bookshop@Vitabu247·
15Best Quotes 1. “Kids learn more from how you handle money than from what you say about it.” 2. “Financial education starts long before the first paycheck.” 3. “Small money habits in childhood become lifelong financial patterns.” 4. “Teaching kids delayed gratification is teaching them future freedom.” 5. “A child who understands money early understands choices early.” 6. “You do not need to be rich to raise financially smart children.” 7. “Money conversations at home shape confidence in the real world.” 8. “Allowance should teach responsibility, not entitlement.” 9. “The goal is not to raise kids who love money, but kids who know how to manage it.” 10. “Every spending decision teaches a lesson either intentionally or accidentally.” 11. “Financial literacy is one of the few gifts that compounds over time.” 12. “Children who learn to save learn to think beyond the moment.” 13. “Smart money habits protect freedom, opportunity, and peace of mind.” 14. “Parents don't need perfect finances to teach valuable money lessons.” 15. “Teaching kids about money is really teaching them about life.”
Learners Bookshop tweet media
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@TheAbojani The four-skill stack here is the whole game. Most adults are still trying to learn earn-save-invest-spend in their thirties.
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Abojani Investment 🇰🇪🇺🇬🇹🇿
Financial literacy is one of the greatest gifts you can pass down. Teaching your kids how to earn, save, invest, and spend wisely ensures they grow up with the skills to build and sustain wealth. It also gives you peace of mind knowing that they’ll do perfectly fine on their own and that whatever you leave behind won’t be wasted but will instead multiply in capable hands.
Abojani Investment 🇰🇪🇺🇬🇹🇿 tweet media
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@ISAtoSixFigures Starting at zero is the cheat code most parents miss. The math is wild when you give time room to work.
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UK Investor
UK Investor@ISAtoSixFigures·
Nobody really talks about how powerful consistency is when it’s done for your kids. £25 a week from Child Benefit + £100 from each parent monthly = £225/month. Invested into a JISA. Left alone. No trading, no noise. At an 8% average return (think S&P 500 or a global tracker), that quietly turns into ~£140K–£150K by 18. That’s: • First home deposit sorted • Uni paid without debt • Or a serious head start most people never get The mad part? It’s not about how much you earn. It’s about when you start. Most people wait until their kids are teenagers to think about money. By then, the compounding window is already closing. Start at 0 years old… and time does all the heavy lifting. The system won’t teach this. But once you see it, you can’t unsee it. #JISA #Investing #UKInvesting #Compounding #FinancialFreedom
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kidcashapp retweetledi
WhereParentsTalk.com
WhereParentsTalk.com@Parents_Talk·
Raising confident, resilient kids starts with one belief: you believe in them. Author Margo Machol Bisnow shares how parents can nurture entrepreneurial thinking—by embracing failure, supporting passions & letting kids explore. 🎧 Listen: buff.ly/pdDNvLz #parenting
WhereParentsTalk.com tweet media
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@lizbettalksmo The ripple effect of this is huge. Every parent you reach teaches a kid who teaches another kid.
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Lizbet Barajas
Lizbet Barajas@lizbettalksmo·
Every time I think about how busy this small business keeps me, I like to imagine all the parents receiving the binder who are now teaching THEIR kids financial literacy. To think that I've played a small part in making that happen, and that more ki...
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@Money_Advantage The avoidance loop is real. What's the one conversation you wish more families would start having earlier?
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TheMoneyAdvantage
TheMoneyAdvantage@Money_Advantage·
I want to catch you before tomorrow, because this is the moment most people hesitate. You’ve been thinking about this. You know legacy planning matters, but it feels big, complex, like something you’ll get to later. And later quietly turns into never. Or maybe it’s not the size of it, it’s the weight of it. What if I get this wrong? What if the very thing I’m trying to do to bless my family creates confusion instead? That question keeps more families stuck than anything else. You might also be looking at your situation and thinking, this isn’t simple. There’s business, investments, different personalities, moving parts. That’s not a reason to wait. That’s the reason to lead. And if everything feels fine right now, your family is good, your finances are strong, nothing feels urgent, that’s actually when this matters most. Because legacy isn’t tested when you’re here. It’s revealed when you’re not. Most families avoid these conversations, not because they don’t care, but because it feels uncomfortable to go there. But what you avoid now, your children will have to face later, without you. That’s why I’m teaching this. Not to overwhelm you, but to give you a clear path so you can design a legacy that actually blesses your family. Not just transfer wealth, but transfer it well. You don’t need to have everything figured out. You just need to get in the room. Join me tomorrow at 9am Eastern. I’ll walk you through it. Register here: buff.ly/vZxvAxZ
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@MrsHodl This reframe hits. The time is the actual inheritance.
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Mrs Hodl ✦ Family · Wealth · Legacy
The builder's dilemma: The more we build, the less time we have. The less time we have, the more money does the parenting. The more money does the parenting, the less you're building a legacy. The answer isn't less ambition. It's more intentional with the time that already exists.
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@SteveUrkelDude Didn't learn any of this growing up either. Breaking the cycle for the next generation is everything.
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kidcashapp retweetledi
Jordan McFarland, CFP®, EA
Jordan McFarland, CFP®, EA@JrdnMcFarland·
Most people think a great life is about adding things. It's not. It's about subtracting them. Subtract negative people → more peace, more real connection Subtract money stress → better spouse, better parent, better giver Subtract worthless evening habits → more sleep, more time to move The additions are easy. The subtractions take focus.
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@Finance_Neelam The skillset transfer is the whole game. Money habits form by age 7 and most parents miss that window entirely.
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Neelam Beniwal, CFA
Neelam Beniwal, CFA@Finance_Neelam·
70% of wealthy families lose their wealth by the 2nd generation. 90% lose it by the 3rd. Money wasn't the problem. Mindset that made it, wasn't transferred. You can write your kids into your will. You can't write in: → Discipline → Decision-making → Emotional control → Hunger to build from zero Money has an expiry date without the skillset behind it. Families that stay wealthy don't just pass down assets. They pass down the ability to create them. Tag someone building wealth for their kids, not just a bank balance! #WealthBuilding #PersonalFinance
Neelam Beniwal, CFA tweet media
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kidcashapp
kidcashapp@kidcashapp·
@GhostFaceChilll Imagine what that $5k turns into by the time they're 25 if it just sits in an index fund. Wild that this isn't the default.
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Chill
Chill@GhostFaceChilll·
Instead of spending $1400-5k on a dress for prom, how about putting that money in your kids pocket and spend it on something that’s worth it 🤔 like a car, college tuition or invest those funds!
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