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Let Children Learn Money From Garage Sale (2026)

shieldSnaggyCodes Editorial Team calendar_todayJun 18, 2026 schedule7 min read verifiedFact-checked
Let Children Learn Money From Garage Sale (2026)

Saving money on let children learn money does not have to be complicated. We rounded up the essentials so you can spend less and skip the guesswork.

Key Takeaways

  • (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); What a change!
  • Just in my last post, I bragged about the fact that I do not get enough time to write blog on week days.
  • Surprisingly today I got a chance to pen (key) down this post.
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What a change! Just in my last post, I bragged about the fact that I do not get enough time to write blog on week days. Surprisingly today I got a chance to pen (key) down this post.

This post is about garage sale for sure, but not about how you can make maximum profit out it, 100’s of writers covered the topic with 1000’s of articles already. You, yourself must have read 10’s of those. There’s nothing I can write which they didn’t already. I would cover another useful aspect of garage sale today.

We have internal discussion board at my work,  where yesterday the hot discussion was about garage sales and how we can leverage it to impart valuable lessons of money to our kids. The decision to make it my next blog post subject was no brainer.  Here I only need to present the ideas discussed today. I will change the names and pick four of the most motivating stories.

So, here are the various innovative ways you can engage your kids in a garage sale which will impart a life long money lesson in them

Money Can be Earned and It Is Rewarding

Betty’s daughter Kyle, a 6-year-old school kid had a lemonade stall for 2 hours while their garage sale was on. Kayla earned $7.5 at $1 per glass rate, after paying for the ice cream from a visiting ice cream truck and paying for a toy from a neighboring garage sale.

Kyle learned that if she has valuable items which people like, she will get paid for it. If she earns on her own she gets to enjoy life. If she keeps some portion of the money, she can enjoy in the future with the remaining part. All very valuable lessons.

Even The Trash Is Money

Ricks’s daughters Martha and Gabriela, 5th and 7th graders, helped their parents organize the items which belonged to them. Their job was to man the toys and books table, and most importantly they were tasked to note down buyers answers about why the item is being bought. It so happened that on one particular occasion, upon hearing the buyers point of view on a specific hand craft, Martha refused to sell it further. Situation was handled by Rick.

The most key lessons they learned is ‘Our trash is somebody’s treasure’. The early we learn about the value of a good, the better consumer we would be. We will waste a lot less, making this world free of clutter, trash and unwanted expensive items.

Money Should Be Managed

Jeffrey, Sean’s son of 12, managed his own table. He sold off his used clothes, toys and books, and a bicycle which he was convinced to sell after much appreciation, even though he had a new bigger bike. His parents didn’t succeed to persuade him to part off with video games though. He set up the cost tags on each individual items, he set the initial cost tags on them,later corrected by Sean. All monetary transaction were hadnled by him. He was even required to keep a spread sheet of the items sold along with initial and selling prices.

The lesson Jeffrey had with this is how he can transact with money, how to keep accurate count of the bills and the coins. He learned book-keeping up to some extent as well.  He did all the bargaining with buyers himself, which earned him invaluable lessons on the power and flexibility of pricing.

More Money Can Be Earned By Proper Marketing Of Products

Josue, 14-year-old son of Cynthia Was given a herculean task by his father to clean up their huge DVD collection. He was offered to keep half of the sales  proceed only if, he were able to successfully sell all the movies and albums. Although at the end of the day he didn’t succeed, but there were merely a couple of albums left. Which allowed Josue to keep 1/3 of the proceed as an award from his parents.

Josue learned that if right pitch is behind, things can be sold off in market. If there is incentive and more eagerness. Perhaps Josue will now analyze what could have been done better to sell off all the DVDs?

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What Else

There were various other aspects discussed over there on the board on this subject. People stated attending garage sales with children offer similar learning opportunities, they learn about bargaining, specially if you want to purchase an item for your kid, take him/her to store to get the cost tag, then visit a nearby garage sales to search for the item, if you find, bring the cost difference to your child’s attention.

Kids get perplexed when they see a brand new or ‘almost a brand new’ item in garage sales, if you come across this in future, let your child ask the sellers on the reasons the items are on sale. Depending on the answer, you can teach your child about the importance of spending money wisely, explain to your kid that the seller ideally shouldn’t have bought the item from store in the first place.

This is my opinion, if your kid’s piggy bank has $20 and she wants to purchase a Barbie, make her options known, whether to purchase a new Barbie from store or to purchase used Barbie from a sale with various other toys,  at the same cost. If possible take her to sale and show her what all she can have instead of that brand new Barbie from store. Replace Barbie with any thing applicable to your kid and this applies to all parents.

Do let me know how you feel about this write-up, which has real life personal experiences of my colleagues. Your comments are greatly awaited everyday on every post of mine, don’t let me down!

For now while trying for our first child, let me make a note of the things I could make my kid aware off about money.

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Final Thoughts

The bottom line: a little research on let children learn money goes a long way. Compare your options, watch for seasonal offers, and never pay full price when a better deal is one click away.

Originally published at onecentatatime.com.

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