Pocket money in two homes: keeping it fair and consistent
Pocket money in two homes: keeping it fair and consistent. When children split time between two households, pocket money can quickly become a source of confusion or conflict. Agreeing on a broad framework – even if amounts differ – gives children the financial consistency they need to feel secure across both homes.
Why consistency matters more than equal amounts
Children are remarkably good at understanding that different homes have different rules. What they struggle with is unpredictability – not knowing from week to week what they will receive, or feeling that money at one home is used to make a point about the other.
The goal is not to match the other parent pound for pound. The goal is to give your child a reliable, predictable arrangement at your home that they can count on.
A framework that works in any co-parenting arrangement
Whether you co-parent amicably or through a solicitor, the following structure keeps pocket money straightforward:
Base allowance – unconditional
A weekly or fortnightly sum that your child can count on, regardless of behaviour or what happened at the other home. This is their financial foundation: it teaches budgeting, saving, and patience without tying money to emotional outcomes.
| Age | Suggested weekly range (UK, 2026) |
|---|---|
| 5–7 | £1.50 – £3 |
| 8–10 | £3 – £5 |
| 11–13 | £5 – £8 |
| 14–16 | £8 – £15 |
These are starting points – adjust for your circumstances. What matters is consistency, not the exact figure.
Extra earnings – for extra tasks
Beyond the base allowance, children can earn additional money by taking on jobs above their regular responsibilities. This models real-world effort-and-reward without making basic family contributions feel transactional.
When amounts differ between homes
If the other home gives more or less, resist the temptation to compete. Explain calmly: “In this home, we do it this way.” Most children – especially younger ones – accept this quickly when the explanation is matter-of-fact rather than defensive.
If significant differences are causing genuine distress for your child, it is worth raising in mediation. A shared approach to pocket money is a reasonable thing to discuss, even if many other financial arrangements are in dispute.
Keeping a record
A simple written record of what your child receives from your home – dates, amounts, and what it covered – protects everyone. It is not about building a legal case; it is about having a clear, honest account if questions ever arise. A straightforward digital record is enough.