How to Teach Kids to Handle Credit Cards

This four-step plan will help prepare your children to control their spending, pay bills on time and avoid fees.

One of the questions I’m often asked is how to teach kids to handle credit cards and other kinds of plastic. And I’ve always recommended a four-step sequence. First, children should learn to manage cold, hard cash in the form of an allowance. Then they can move on to making deposits into and withdrawals from a bank account using a basic ATM card. Next comes a debit card attached to a checking account, which lets them make purchases and teaches them how to balance their account. Finally, they can apply for a credit card on their own when they have the experience and maturity to handle it.

But there’s been an upheaval in the financial-services industry over the past few years: credit card legislation, new rules (and fees) for debit cards, a flurry of celebrity-endorsed prepaid cards, and the advent of digital wallets, which let you pay with a swipe of your smart phone and require no plastic at all. So I thought this would be a good time to take stock of my advice and see if it’s still valid.

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Janet Bodnar
Contributor

Janet Bodnar is editor-at-large of Kiplinger's Personal Finance, a position she assumed after retiring as editor of the magazine after eight years at the helm. She is a nationally recognized expert on the subjects of women and money, children's and family finances, and financial literacy. She is the author of two books, Money Smart Women and Raising Money Smart Kids. As editor-at-large, she writes two popular columns for Kiplinger, "Money Smart Women" and "Living in Retirement." Bodnar is a graduate of St. Bonaventure University and is a member of its Board of Trustees. She received her master's degree from Columbia University, where she was also a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in Business and Economics Journalism.