ESSENTIAL MONEY SKILLS EVERY TEENAGER SHOULD KNOW!The teenage years are important for learning, discovering the world, and exploring new interests and passions. It's a time of growth and self-discovery, where teens learn more about themselves and their place in the world.
While these are exciting times, they can also be daunting. With so much to learn and so many new experiences, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the responsibility of growing up.
That's where this book comes in. To help teens navigate one of the biggest responsibilities and challenges every young adult has to Money.
Love it or hate it, money is an essential part of life, and learning how to manage it effectively is crucial.
Money Skills for Teens, by Ferne Bowe (author of Life Skills for Young Adults & Life Skills for Tweens), provides everything a teen needs to know about personal finance. From budgeting and saving to investing and building credit, this book covers all the essential money skills every teenager should know.
Using real-life examples and easy-to-understand language, the book provides practical advice to help teens develop a healthy relationship with money. From budgeting and saving for emergencies to investing in stocks and using credit responsibly, this book covers it all.
In Money Skills for Teens, Ferne covers how and open your first bank accountRead a bank statementMaintain a healthy credit scoreAvoid financial fraud and scamsIdentify your spending personality (and keep it in check)Use credit responsiblyPay for your first carSave for a rainy dayDevelop a healthy, long-term outlook to investingAnd 40+ more financial skills
Money Skills for Teens is the go-to beginner’s guide to personal finance for teenagers. Providing them with a solid foundation of money skills, knowledge, and experiences to help them make wise financial decisions.
If you like simple, practical, and real-world advice, you'll love this book.
The book talks about things in general, it doesn’t specify a lot but have a bunch of examples and fotos at the start it was good, it has a great start that gives a better understanding important but basic things, but I find the end repetitive and boring.
Read this to preview for my soon-to-be 13 year old niece. I wanna give her a headstart in finance and not be money stupid like me during my teens and 20s. This book isn't quite for younger teens, maybe for 15+ years old. Oh well. It's still a good read, and I learned some stuff as well