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6-8needs-wants

Why the difference matters

See why sorting spending into needs and wants helps families make better financial decisions.

In this lesson

Why the difference matters is part of Needs vs Wants Intro. This preview shows how needs-wants connects to everyday family decisions such as earning, saving, spending choices, goals, approvals, or parent-guided money conversations inside Progress Penguin.

Today’s money mission

Imagine this situation: Ade spent all his money on suya. Now he can't pay bus fare home.

What you need to know

If you don't separate needs from wants, you risk running out of money for things that keep you safe and healthy. Look for this pattern in every money decision you make.

Real-life example

Real-life money moment: Before payday: food ({{money:3000}} need), transport ({{money:1000}} need), shoes ({{money:5000}} want). You have {{money:6000}}. Rank your spending. — Food (3000) + transport (1000) = 4000. Left: 2000. Save it toward shoes. Needs first, wants funded with leftovers.

Progress Penguin connection

Open your transaction history for the past 7 days and add up all spending. Now separate it into two totals: spending on needs and spending on wants. Which total is larger? Is that the proportion you intended?

Activity preview

Choose the best money move

Use what you just learned. Do not guess — choose the option you can explain.

Quiz preview

Why separate needs from wants?

So essentials are covered first
To make life boring
To save paper
Adults said so

Ade spent all his money on suya. Now he can't pay bus fare home. What was his mistake?

He ate too much
Suya is too expensive
He chose the wrong bus
He spent on a want before covering a need