"The goal isn’t more money. The goal is living life on your terms."
Hi there,
Welcome to this week’s Mini Millionaires! We’ve loved hearing your stories, so please keep them coming.
Years ago, we discovered FIRE: Financial Independence, Retire Early, an aggressive strategy to build wealth so your passive income covers all living costs, giving you total freedom over your time without ever having to work for someone else for a paycheck again.
Raising money masters isn’t just about smart spending, but also about playing the long money game. Teaching your kids the FIRE mindset early gives them the ultimate life cheat code: autonomy.
Let’s dive into how to teach your mini millionaire about financial independence.

Game On
🔥 Mini Millionaires on FIRE: The most insane money trick yet.
📋 Choose Freedon Today: The Pocket Money Escape Plan.
🎲 FinMaster FTW: Another FinMaster stockist for your convenience.
🫙 The Votes From Last Week’s Poll: The hardest Jar to fill.

Money Smart
Catching FIRE
Financial Independence, Retire Early (FIRE) is a strategy to gain total control over your time.
It’s a pretty aggressive way of saving and investing until your retirement nest egg is large enough to live off the returns forever.
The secret to FIRE is the savings rate.
By saving between 50% and 75% of your income, until you’ve saved 25x your annual expenses, you can safely withdraw 4% each year without ever running out of money.
For instance, if your annual expenses are R200’000, multiply that by 25 and you’ll need to save R5 million to be considered financially independent.
Wait what?
For a kid, this means learning that money isn't actually for spending, but for buying their future freedom.
Please note: there are varying factors in SA that have an impact on the numbers (like inflation and tax rules) slightly, but the core principle remains.
1. A mindset to cultivate
Stop buying stuff. Start buying time.
Money doesn’t buy happiness. At least not when you’re spending all of your money on things.
Most kids see R200 and they’ve got a pretty long list of things they want to spend it on. But a mini millionaire who is a FIRE-minded kid sees that R200 as a tiny employee that works 24/7 to earn them more Rands.
The key mindset shift here is that every Rand they save is a future minute where they don't have to work. And if they can wrap their head around that, their entire relationship with spending (and shopping for the latest flashy thing) changes.
Takeaway: Money is a tool for autonomy, not to fill their toy box.
2. A habit to form
The Future-Mini Millionaire Tax.
Teach your mini millionaire to tax every bit of pocket money or birthday gift by 50% before they even spend a cent.
So if they get R100 from Granny, R50 goes to their Future-Me (their investments) and R50 goes to their Current-Me (spending). This habit makes living on less than you earn a natural instinct rather than a chore.
And doing it from a young age when their financial commitments are pretty low (i.e. before they even have a family), cements the habit long before they even get paid their first salary.
Takeaway: If you never see the money, you’ll never miss it.
3. A tip to try
Calculate the Hours of Effort required.
The next time your mini millionaire wants a R500 gadget, or a new pair of sneakers, don't talk about the price.
Ask them that if they earned R50 per chore (let’s say washing your car and it takes them an hour or two on a Saturday), is this new gadget worth 10 car washes? Or is a pair of sneakers worth hours of washing cars every weekend for nearly 3 months?
This forces them to weigh the opportunity cost of their energy. This is called Value-Based Spending, and it’s all about only spending on things that align with your personal values and priorities.
Takeaway: If the work-price feels too high, the item isn't worth the price tag.

Your Thoughts…
How do you think your Mini Millionaire would react to saving 50% of their money?

Use This
Choosing freedom today
This week’s free resource is your Pocket Money Escape Plan.
It’s a simple, two-page roadmap designed to help your mini millionaire calculate their very own Freedom Number. By multiplying their annual pocket money by 25, they’ll discover exactly how much they need to invest to retire from their allowance forever.
But then we take it a step further, showing them a grown-up reality check on page 2. It compares their target to the millions needed for a family's expenses.
It’s the perfect way to show them that while the numbers are big, starting now gives them an unbeatable head start.


Plus: Try This
Another One
We’ve just added another store to our FinMaster stockists.
Welcome to the Fintrverse, Level Up Store, home to South Africa's most loved collectibles, trading cards, and board games.
FinMaster is our very own board game designed to turn game night into a wealth-building adventure. Instead of boring lectures, kids (and let’s face it, adults love it too) learn to buy assets, navigate market crashes, and outsmart opponents to build a winning portfolio.

See, even biggie millionaires vibe with FinMaster...
It’s a super fun, hands-on way to give your mini millionaire real-world money superpowers. All while having a lot of fun.

The Tribe Has Spoken
In our reader poll last week we asked which of the 4 Jars your mini millionaire finds the hardest to fill? And the trick is getting them to understand something needs to go in EACH jar, hahaha.
🟨🟨⬜️⬜️⬜️ 📈 Sow (Investing for growth)
⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ 🚲 Save (Long-term goals)
⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ ❤️ Share (Giving to others)
⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ 💸 Spend (Not spending it all!)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 😵💫 Understanding they’re meant to put something in EACH jar.
What you said:
“The current convo happening in our home right now. Thanks for the new Money Jars resource. Perfect timing.”
JM
We love it when a plan comes together. So glad the new Money Jars resource is proving helpful.


Let’s Connect
What’s been your mini millionaire’s favourite lesson they’ve learnt from our newsletter so far?
Or is there something you’re navigating on their money smart journey right now you’d like us to talk about in an upcoming feature?
Hit reply and tell us. We’d love to know.
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