Built for real family money talks

Turn allowances into confidence, one choice at a time.

KidBank gives families a simple way to track balances, set savings goals, and show kids what happens when they earn, spend, and let money grow.

10 min

to start a family account

3 views

parent, child, simulator

100%

kid approved... probably

Snapshot

The Stewart Family

  • Margaret (9)$170.94
  • Amelia (7)$141.12
  • Georgia (4)$96.37

Growth mode

Fixed 4.5% annual

Clear balances. Read-only child mode. Parent controls for every change.

How it works

Simple enough for kids. Easy enough for parents.

01

Track one balance

KidBank keeps money simple with one balance per child and a clean debit/credit ledger.

02

Set goals

Kids can add savings goals and track their progress as they earn more.

03

Run what-if scenarios

Show kids how recurring earnings and interest can impact outcomes with a visual simulator.

Parent + Child Experience

Coach without chaos.

  • Parent dashboard with household overview and guided growth controls
  • Child dashboard focused on balance, goals, and recent activity
  • Informative child mode to help kids keep track of their finances and jump start their financial education

Parent

Control Center

Add credits, record debits, apply monthly growth, and run the simulator to help kids with goal-setting.

Child

Learning Dashboard

See goals, progress, and transaction history with just a bit of education.

Simulator

What Happens If I Earn More?

Interactive chart compares current path and growth impact.

Goal board preview

Give savings a purpose kids can see.

Every goal has a description, target amount, and time horizon, plus simple visuals that kids can understand at a glance.

Bike

New bike

$180 in about 8 months

78%

Need about $39 more

FAQ

Quick answers for busy parents

Is this connected to a real bank account?

No. KidBank is meant to give you a place to track balances for your kids without handing cash over.

Can kids edit balances themselves?

No. Child mode is a read-only view. Parents are in control of balance changes.

Does it teach investing concepts?

Yes. Parents can set a growth model that simulates the impact of investing compared with recurring earnings.

Who is it for?

Families with kids learning foundational money habits, especially ages 7-12.