In the middle of a busy workday, a parent’s phone lights up.
“Hi Mum, I’ve run out of cash. Can you top up my pocket money?”
It is a message many Kenyan parents know too well. The term is barely halfway through; the budget was carefully planned, and yet the pocket money has vanished. No one quite knows how. There is no record, no breakdown, just urgency.
For decades, handing over cash has been the default way to equip students for school life. It felt practical. Simple. Trusted. But in a world where almost every other financial transaction has gone digital, cash is beginning to look like the weakest link in the system.
Cash moves fast. In school environments, it can be misplaced, borrowed, and not paid back, stolen or spent impulsively under peer influence. There are no alerts. No spending history. No way to pause or recover it if it disappears.
For teenagers who are still developing financial discipline, unrestricted cash can quietly undermine learning. The result? Mid-term panic calls, emergency transfers, and budgets stretched thinner than planned.
Digital era
Kenya’s financial habits have shifted significantly. Parents pay bills on mobile apps. Groceries are settled through digital wallets. Transport fares and utility payments are traceable with a tap. Yet, when it comes to students’ pocket money, many parents still prefer folded notes tucked into wallets.
Prepaid cards are increasingly offering a practical alternative. They allow a parent to load a fixed amount while maintaining visibility over how it is used. The student spends independently but within limits.
Among the institutions offering such solutions is Equity Bank, whose prepaid cards are designed for families seeking safer, more structured spending tools for students.
Reshaping independence
A prepaid card does not remove independence; it reshapes it.
Students can withdraw money, pay for items at school canteens, or make online purchases where permitted. But every transaction leaves a trace. Parents can review spending patterns. If a card is misplaced, it can be blocked instantly.
That small layer of structure introduces accountability. It also opens the door to practical financial education such as teaching young people how to manage finances, prioritise needs, and plan within limits.
Equity prepaid card, for example, provides access through ATMs, point-of-sale machines, agency banking, and e-commerce platforms. It reduces exposure of a primary bank account while giving students a secure way to transact. Getting an Equity prepaid card is easy: simply visit any Equity branch with your ID and KRA PIN to get started.
Pocket money has always been about more than snacks and toiletries. It is often a child’s first lesson in managing finances. The point is not to monitor every purchase. It is to replace guesswork with clarity.
Teaching students to navigate structured, traceable financial systems can prepare them better for adulthood.
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