The checklist is longer than laundry and rent. Teens need a few core habits, the right safety nets, and a clear idea of where to get help. Keep lessons short and repeat them in real life, not just at the kitchen table. A little practice now saves cash, stress, and late-night phone calls later.
1. How Credit Really Works

Explain credit scores, reporting, and why on-time payments matter. Show them how to check a report and set alerts. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s guide to credit reports and scores is a simple primer. Start with one low-limit card and pay in full each month.
2. Build a No-Drama Budget

Use a zero-based plan with four buckets: rent, food, transport, and everything else. Automate bills and savings on payday. Track spending weekly so small leaks do not sink the month. Keep a $500 starter emergency fund.
3. Food Safety and Basic Cooking

Teach safe thawing, fridge temps, and doneness. Make three cheap staples, like a sheet-pan dinner, chili, and rice bowls. The steps in FoodSafety.gov’s four keys to food safety cover clean, separate, cook, and chill. Label leftovers so they get eaten.
4. Laundry and Cleaning That Actually Works

Cold water handles most loads and protects colors. Show stain pre-treating and how much detergent to use. Weekly resets for bathroom, kitchen, and floors keep roommates happy. Keep a small cleaning caddy ready to go.
5. Sleep and Daily Rhythm

Set a regular bedtime, even on weekends. Teach how caffeine, late screens, and light mess with rest. Good sleep is the cheapest performance enhancer. A simple wind-down routine pays off during exams or long shifts.
6. Driving and Travel Safety

Seat belts, speed limits, and phones away. Show how to check tires and fluids, and how to call for roadside help. NHTSA’s page on teen driving safety is a straight guide you can read together. If they do not drive, teach transit basics and rideshare safety.
7. Consent, Boundaries, and Safe Dating

Talk about saying yes, saying no, and hearing both. Model how to leave any situation that feels wrong. RAINN’s plain-language page on what consent means is a good place to start. Make a code word for quick exits.
8. Alcohol, Vaping, and Drugs

Explain how peer plans turn into peer pressure. Share your expectations and consequences clearly. Teach refusal lines they can actually say. Remind them to call you, no judgment, if they need a safe ride.
9. Mental Health Basics

Show how to spot stress, anxiety, or depression and when to ask for help. Put campus counseling and local clinic numbers in their phone. Normalize a talk with a pro before a crisis. Movement, sunlight, and regular meals help more than they think.
10. First Aid and Self Care

Teach wound cleaning, fever care, and when to seek urgent help. Up to now, you’ve been their first aider, taking care of their illnesses, making their ouchies feel better, and knowing when to ge them help. But if they’re moving out, you won’t be there, and they’ve got to be able to fend for themselves. And maybe others, too. Build a small kit with meds, bandages, and a thermometer. Review how to refill prescriptions and read labels. Keep insurance cards and allergy info handy.
11. Scam and Fraud Awareness

Walk through fake job posts, delivery texts, and “urgent” bank messages. The FTC’s advice on how to avoid a scam shows the common hooks. Teach them to pause, verify through a known number, and never pay by gift card or crypto. And don’t neglect letting them know to freeze credit if something feels off.
12. Digital Privacy and Security

Use strong passphrases and a password manager. Turn on multi-factor authentication everywhere. Keep software updated and think before posting or sharing. Assume screenshots last forever.
13. Housing and Roommate Ground Rules

Explain leases, deposits, and what “joint and several” means. Write a simple roommate agreement for chores, noise, and guests. Walk the unit with the landlord and take timestamped photos. Keep maintenance requests in writing.
14. Jobs, Interviews, and Paychecks

Practice a short introduction and two STAR stories. Show how to read a pay stub and set up direct deposit. Track hours, keep receipts, and follow instructions exactly. Send one thank-you note after interviews.
15. Taxes They Will Actually File

If they earn money, show how to gather W-2s and 1099s and file on time. Many first-time filers qualify for IRS Free File, which walks them through a return. Teach why withholding matters and where refunds really come from. Save a PDF of every return.











