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Money Moral Dilemma: Should our four-year-old child pay for her own extracurricular activities?

MSE_Kelvin
MSE_Kelvin Posts: 380 MSE Staff
Seventh Anniversary 10 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
edited 14 January at 5:05PM in MoneySaving mums
This week's MoneySaver who wants advice asks...

Since she was born, our four-year-old has been given money by friends and family on birthdays etc. She now has a few grand saved up in a bank account we opened for her. Recently, we've signed her up to some extracurricular activities she wants to try - gymnastics, swimming, drama and Scouts. The cost mounts up, so would it be fair to charge them to her account, rather than our own?

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Comments

  • FlorayG
    FlorayG Posts: 1,802 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    At four years old she has no idea what money is for so it's a meaningless question. It's effectively your money until she is old enough to understand

  • saajan_12
    saajan_12 Posts: 4,613 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    Perhaps ask the gifters if they'd be happy to give the gift of gym class (or whatever) instead? As giving money to such a young child is sort of meaningless, given they can't really understand what it is yet. 

    Also maybe in future the family members can be encouraged to give toys / pay for a class etc - things that the child would actually use or interact with in some way. Giving money at this age is really just parking cash to give the child later.. if that's what they want then why don't they just keep the money and give a lump sum later. 
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