Back to Savings Goals
6-8saving

SMART savings goals

A real savings goal needs an amount, a reason, and a deadline.

In this lesson

SMART savings goals is part of Savings Goals. This preview shows how saving 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

DeeDee sees a real money moment: Which of these is a proper savings goal? Before choosing an answer, slow down and find the money action in the story.

What you need to know

A real savings goal needs an amount, a reason, and a deadline. The key is to ask what is being traded, earned, spent, saved, trusted, or recorded. Once you find that action, the lesson becomes easier: the right choice should match the money rule, not just the loudest feeling or fastest option.

Real-life example

For example, if a child sees a price, a balance, a goal, or a task reward, they should ask: what changed, who gave something up, and what should the account record show next?

Progress Penguin connection

In Progress Penguin, this lesson connects to your balances, requests, tasks, savings goals, and approvals. The app lets you see the money rule happen instead of only reading about it.

Activity preview

Choose the best money move

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

Create or review a savings goal

Open your kid dashboard and create or review one savings goal with a clear name, amount, and date.

Quiz preview

Which of these is a proper savings goal?

'I want to save some money one day'
'Save {{currencyCode}}{{money:8000}} for football boots by end of next month'
'Save for something expensive'
'Put money away sometimes'

What three things make a savings goal real and reachable?

A wish, a prayer, and a parent
A clear name, a specific amount, and a deadline date
A bank account, a receipt, and a plan
A big number, a long time, and a friend