A table with a hand-drawn sign.
My mom’s big pitcher.
A few lemons.
Some water.
Sugar. A lot of it.
An extra cup for quarters and dollar bills.
The lemonade stand of my day all seemed so simple. In fact, money in general seemed much simpler back then.
Things cost less. Parents from even one generation ago didn’t really talk to their kids about their finances or how they should handle money when they grew up. And cash as a virtual concept didn’t even exist.
Lemonade in a new world
Today’s parents are entering a whole new world when it comes to raising money-savvy kids, one we never could have imagined back when we were running our own lemonade stands.
For generations, the lemonade stand has always been America’s first classroom for entrepreneurship. We busted summer boredom while getting our first taste at earning our own money.
Whichever generation raised us, using our kids’ lemonade stands to teach saving skills is a great way to start them off on the right financial footing.
Today, a lemonade stand can teach kids how to navigate a pricier, more digital, and more uncertain financial world and use the tools available to them to make lasting money-smart decisions.
The dollar doesn’t stretch like it used to
In January of 1990 (when many of today’s parents were running lemonade stands of their own), a pound of lemons cost about $0.93. According to Microtrends (a research platform for investors) as of April 2026, it’s more than double that price, at about $2.03.
It’s not just fruit. It feels like everything costs more. That’s why nearly two-thirds of parents in Intuit’s Financial Literacy Survey say that money is tight right now.
On the bright side, 81 percent of parents from that same survey say their financial stress has become a wake-up call, one they’re passing on to their kids. Starting the conversation early about how much things cost is a great way to introduce the value of a dollar, whether it’s buying lemons or anything else.
Cash as a virtual concept
Because kids are growing up in a world where apps like Venmo and PayPal are just as normal as a dollar bill (sometimes more so), the money conversation has gotten a whole lot more interesting.
And the lemonade stand has never been a better place to start it.
A lemonade stand is a great way to make money and budgeting tangible. Kids create a product they can hold in their hands and sell to people they must speak to (who are right in front of them).
And they’ll most likely be getting at least some of their payments in cash.
Holding and counting physical money and taking that money to the bank is an excellent way to reinforce the idea that, although we often exchange money virtually these days, money in every form is very real, and what we decide to do with it has very real consequences.
How to talk about digital money without making it scary
We’re becoming a cashless society by the day. Friends and neighbors will probably tap their digital wallets instead of digging for change, which makes the stand a perfect opening to talk about how virtual payments work and how to use them safely.
A survey conducted by Nex Gen Personal Finance highlights that digital wallets are already common among kids: 12% of 7-to-9-year-olds, 15% of 10-to-12-year-olds, and 23% of 13-to-14-year-olds say they use them to pay for things. Odds are, your kid’s already encountered this.
But you don’t need to give your kid their own Venmo account. It’s fine to let them use yours and set up a simple system, like a printed QR code linking to your account, so payments are easy for everyone.
Either way, a lemonade stand is a great excuse to explain how digital payments (credit cards included) work, and how easy it is to forget there’s real money behind them.
It’s also a good moment to talk online safety: multi-factor authentication, password managers, and avoiding public Wi-Fi all help keep banking info out of the wrong hands.
Some things don’t change. Savings still matters
What should our kids do with the money they just earned? That LEGO kit and new kicks are cool, but the lemonade stand was always about more than spending money. It was about saving it, too. And that hasn’t changed.
But generational differences can influence how people prioritize saving. A recent publication in Marketwatch notes that Gen Alpha kids (those born in 2010 or later) who were raised by Gen X parents had a 30% higher average savings balance than peers raised by millennials. They were also dipping into their savings a third less often. Whichever generation raised us, using our kids’ lemonade stands to teach saving skills is a great way to start them off on the right financial footing.
The bottom line
The tools we use to teach our kids may have changed (apps instead of cash boxes, inflated lemon prices, generational gaps in savings habits), but the instinct to earn something, save it, and understand what it’s worth hasn’t moved an inch. This summer, the lemonade stand is still the best classroom I know for teaching kids that.
And that lesson doesn’t have to stop at the lemonade stand. Once kids get the hang of saving what they earned, that habit can grow with them. The Trump Account, a tax-advantaged savings and investment account for kids, is one way to turn a summers’ worth of lemonade money into a headstart on financial security.
For more on raising money-smart kids, read about the Trump Account’s investment rules and how it compares to other child savings options.


















