Last updated: February 2026
What if your child turned 18 with a credit score over 750, more than $150,000 in savings and investments, and experience running a real business?
That's not a fantasy. It's a framework, and it's exactly what my husband Travis and I are building for our kids right now.
Most parents teach their children about money through allowance jars and savings accounts. There's nothing wrong with that, but it barely scratches the surface of what's possible when you're strategic. The Wealthy Kid Framework goes further. It uses three specific strategies that any family can implement, and business-owning families have an especially powerful advantage.
Secret #1: Build Their Credit Score Before They Can Drive
Here's a question most parents never think about: at what age can your child start building credit? Most people assume it's 18, when they can apply for their first credit card. But that's wrong. You can start establishing your child's credit history from the day they're born.
The strategy is simple: add your child as an authorized user on one or more of your credit cards. Several major credit card issuers have no minimum age requirement for authorized users, including Bank of America and Capital One. Your child doesn't need to physically have or use the card. Just being listed as an authorized user means your payment history, credit utilization, and account age start appearing on their credit report.
Good credit comes from having multiple trade lines, a long payment history, and low utilization (below 30%). By adding your newborn today, by the time they're 18, they'll have 18 years of credit history. That's longer than most adults have. Combined with multiple trade lines from being authorized users on a few of your accounts, your child could have a credit score over 750 before they ever apply for their own card.
At age 13, you can check their credit report at annualcreditreport.com to make sure everything is reporting correctly. When they turn 18, help them open their own credit cards, and if appropriate, an auto loan or personal loan to diversify their credit mix further.
For a deeper dive on which banks report for authorized users, age requirements, and step-by-step setup, read our full guide: How to Build Your Child's Credit Score Before They Turn 18.
Secret #2: Fund Investment Accounts Early and Let Compound Interest Do the Work
If you invest $200 per month at an 8% average return, it takes about 45 years to reach $1 million. But if you start when your child is born, they hit that milestone before they're 50. If you wait until they're 25 to start, they don't get there until 70. Time is the single most powerful ingredient in wealth building, and your child has more of it than anyone else in the family.
UTMA/UGMA Custodial Accounts require no earned income, have no minimum age, and give your child access to the funds at the age of majority (18 or 21 depending on state). I've been depositing $100 per month into a UGMA at Vanguard for my daughter Dylan since she was five, and we set up the same account for our second child as soon as he got his Social Security number.
529 Savings Plans are specifically designed for education expenses. Contributions grow tax-free and withdrawals are tax-free when used for qualified education costs. Under the SECURE 2.0 Act, unused 529 funds can now be rolled into a Roth IRA (up to $35,000 lifetime, with some conditions).
Custodial Roth IRAs are the crown jewel for business-owning families. Your child can contribute up to $7,500 in 2026 (or their total earned income, whichever is less), the money grows tax-free, and qualified withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. The catch is that your child must have earned income -- which is where Secret #3 comes in.
If you deposit $100 per month into a UGMA from birth to age 18, at an 8% return that account grows to approximately $48,000. If your child also contributes $7,000 per year to a Roth IRA starting at age 8, that account reaches approximately $103,000 by age 18. Combined, your child could have access to over $150,000 before they're old enough to vote.
For a detailed comparison of account types, read: Roth IRA vs UGMA for Kids: Which Account Should Business Owners Use?
Secret #3: Help Them Start a Real Business
Teaching your child to earn money through a business does three things at once. It creates earned income that funds their Roth IRA (Secret #2). It teaches financial literacy, work ethic, and problem-solving in ways school never will. And it gives them a head start on entrepreneurship that most people don't get until their twenties or thirties.
Path 1: Hire your child in your existing business. The wages are deductible to your business, your child earns up to $16,100 tax-free in 2026 (the standard deduction), and if you're a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, you avoid FICA taxes on their wages entirely. This is what we've done with our daughter Dylan since she was six.
Path 2: Help your child start their own business. Kids are more capable than most parents give them credit for. Dylan has run two of her own businesses. She started a hot cocoa stand spending $27 on supplies and making $90 in two days. Then she opened an Etsy store selling handmade bracelets -- with a $50 startup cost and zero advertising, she generated $281 in revenue in her first three weeks.
For a deep dive on helping your child launch their own venture, read: How to Help Your Child Start a Business Before Age 18.
Putting the Framework Together
At birth: Add your child as an authorized user on your credit cards. Open a UGMA account and set up automatic monthly contributions.
Ages 5 to 7: Start involving your child in your business with age-appropriate tasks. Set up a custodial bank account so you can pay them properly. Begin documenting hours and tasks.
Ages 7 to 8: Open a custodial Roth IRA once your child has earned income. Start annual contributions funded by their business wages.
Ages 10 to 13: Help your child explore their own business ideas. Continue Roth IRA contributions and UGMA deposits. Check their credit report at annualcreditreport.com.
Ages 14 to 17: Expand their business responsibilities or support their independent venture. Maximize Roth IRA contributions. Teach them about their investment accounts and what compound growth looks like.
Age 18: Your child has a 750+ credit score, $150,000+ in combined savings and investments, real business experience, and a financial foundation that most adults never achieve.
Use our Tax Savings Calculator to see how much you could save by starting today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to own a business to use this framework?
You need earned income for the Roth IRA piece (Secrets #2 and #3), which typically comes from business ownership. However, the credit building (Secret #1) and UGMA contributions (Secret #2) work for any family regardless of business ownership.
How much does this cost per month?
The investment piece is scalable. Even $50 per month into a UGMA makes a meaningful difference over 18 years. The business income piece actually saves you money through tax deductions, so it's not an additional cost.
What if I'm starting late? My child is already 12.
Start now. Even six years of credit history, investment contributions, and earned income makes a massive difference. The compounding won't be as dramatic as starting at birth, but your child will still be far ahead of their peers.
Won't my child just blow the UGMA money at 18?
This is a real concern, and it's why financial education is part of the framework. By the time your child is 18, they've had years of experience earning money, watching investments grow, and understanding how compound interest works.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Consult a qualified professional for guidance specific to your situation.