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Allowance Chore Chart With Prices: What to Pay Kids for Every Task

You know your kids should help around the house. You might even believe they should earn their spending money. But when it comes to putting actual dollar amounts on each chore, most parents freeze up. How much is "taking out the trash" worth? Should you pay for making the bed? What if your 8-year-old argues that $1 for vacuuming is not enough?

A chore chart with prices solves this by making the rules visible and consistent. Kids see exactly what each task pays, decide which chores they want to take on, and learn the direct connection between effort and income. According to a 2019 survey by the American Institute of CPAs, 86% of kids who receive allowance say they earned at least some of it through chores. The system works because it mirrors the real world: you work, you get paid.

According to a 2019 American Institute of CPAs survey, 86% of kids who receive an allowance say they earned at least some of it through chores.

Here is how to set up a chore chart with prices that actually works for your family, with specific dollar amounts by age group. If you pair chore pay with a base allowance, our allowance by age chart shows typical weekly amounts from age 4 to 17.

Chore chart prices by age at a glance

Short answer: young kids earn about $0.50 to $1.50 per chore, and teens earn $5 to $15 for bigger jobs. Here is the full price-per-chore range and a sensible weekly cap for each age group. Use it as your starting point, then adjust for your budget and the difficulty of each task.

Chore chart prices by age - 2026 quick reference
Age group Price per chore Weekly cap Example paid chore
Ages 4-6$0.50-$1.50$3-$5Feeding a pet ($0.50)
Ages 7-10$1-$3$5-$10Vacuuming one room ($2)
Ages 11-14$2-$5$10-$20Mowing the lawn ($5)
Ages 15-17$5-$15$20-$40Full yard work ($15)

Prices come from Greenlight, BusyKid, and RoosterMoney family survey data. The per-chore breakdown for each age group is below.

Stop guessing what each chore is worth

Penny Time keeps your priced chore list and adds each payout to your kid's balance the moment a chore is checked off.

Chore pay scale by age: how much should chores cost?

A chore pay scale is a simple rule for what each job is worth, set by your child's age and how hard the task is. The table above is that scale in one place: pay starts around $0.50 to $1.50 a chore in the early years and climbs to $5 to $15 for the bigger jobs a teenager can handle. A 6-year-old feeding the cat and a 15-year-old doing the full yard should not earn the same, and a set scale takes the nightly negotiation out of it.

So how much should chores cost? Use the age band as your anchor, then nudge the amount up for anything that takes longer or that nobody else wants to do. A quick counter wipe-down sits at the low end of a band, and scrubbing the whole bathroom sits at the top. Write the price next to each chore and keep it steady for a few weeks so your child learns to predict what they will earn.

Step 1: Split chores into unpaid and paid categories

Before assigning prices, divide tasks into two lists. This is the part most parents skip, and it causes arguments later.

Unpaid chores (family responsibilities): These are tasks every family member does simply because they live in the house. No one gets paid for them.

  • Making their own bed
  • Putting dirty clothes in the hamper
  • Clearing their plate after meals
  • Picking up their own toys and belongings
  • Brushing teeth and basic hygiene

Paid chores (extra work): These go beyond basic self-care and contribute to the household. This is where the price list lives.

Our chores vs. no chores guide walks through three different allowance models if you are still deciding which approach fits your family.

Step 2: Set prices by age group

These ranges come from Greenlight, BusyKid, and RoosterMoney survey data. Adjust based on your budget and local cost of living, but these give you a solid starting point.

Ages 4-6: $0.50-$1.50 per chore

  • Feeding a pet - $0.50
  • Putting away groceries (lower shelves) - $0.50
  • Dusting low surfaces - $0.75
  • Sorting laundry by color - $1.00
  • Watering plants - $0.50
  • Matching socks - $0.75

Ages 7-10: $1-$3 per chore

  • Emptying dishwasher - $1.50
  • Vacuuming one room - $2.00
  • Taking out the trash - $1.00
  • Sweeping the kitchen - $1.50
  • Folding laundry - $2.00
  • Wiping down bathroom counters - $1.50
  • Raking leaves (small yard) - $3.00

Ages 11-14: $2-$5 per chore

  • Mowing the lawn - $5.00
  • Cleaning the bathroom (full) - $4.00
  • Washing the car - $5.00
  • Doing a full load of laundry - $3.00
  • Cooking a simple meal - $4.00
  • Weeding the garden - $3.00
  • Organizing the garage or closet - $5.00

Ages 15-17: $5-$15 per chore

  • Deep cleaning a room - $8.00
  • Grocery shopping with a list - $10.00
  • Babysitting younger siblings (per hour) - $8.00
  • Yard work (mowing + edging + cleanup) - $15.00
  • Cleaning out and organizing the car - $10.00
  • Painting a fence or wall - $15.00

What to pay for popular chores

If you would rather price by task than by age, here are the chores parents ask about most and what families commonly pay. Nudge the amount up for older kids and for jobs that take longer or need more care.

Common chores and what to pay
Chore Typical pay Notes
Make the bedUnpaidBasic self-care, keep it off the price list
Take out the trash$1Quick daily task, good for ages 7 and up
Empty the dishwasher$1.50A solid first paid chore
Vacuum one room$2Check the work with younger kids
Do a full load of laundry$3Sort, wash, dry, and fold
Clean the bathroom$4Full clean, best for ages 11 and up
Mow the lawn$5Add a few dollars for edging and cleanup
Wash the car$5Inside and out for older kids
Babysit a sibling$8 per hourTeens, mirrors real babysitting rates

Use our chore chart tool to generate age-appropriate chore lists with paid and unpaid tags for your child's specific age.

Turn these prices into a real chart

Penny Time tracks each paid chore and adds it to your child's balance automatically.

Step 3: Set weekly earning caps

Without a cap, your 10-year-old will try to do 47 chores on Saturday morning. A weekly maximum keeps things realistic and prevents your family budget from ballooning.

Practical caps by age:

  • Ages 4-6: $3-$5 per week
  • Ages 7-10: $5-$10 per week
  • Ages 11-14: $10-$20 per week
  • Ages 15-17: $20-$40 per week

The allowance calculator can help you figure out the right weekly total based on your child's age and your family situation.

Step 4: Make the chart visible

A chore chart stuffed in a drawer does not work. The chart needs to be somewhere your child sees every day - the fridge, a kitchen wall, or a family bulletin board. For each chore, include:

  • The task name
  • The dollar amount
  • A checkbox or space for the child to mark it done
  • A space for a parent to verify (younger kids need this)

Digital options work too, especially for older kids. Penny Time tracks chores, payments, and savings all in one place, so you do not need to manage a paper chart and cash separately.

Step 5: Pay on a consistent schedule

Pick a pay day and stick to it. Weekly works best for kids under 12. Biweekly or monthly can work for teens, since it more closely mirrors real paychecks. The critical rule: pay on time, every time. If you are inconsistent, kids stop trusting the system and stop doing the chores.

Once they receive their pay, have them split it. The allowance splitter helps kids divide their earnings into save, spend, and give categories before they spend everything in one go.

Let the app keep the chart

Penny Time tracks which chores got done and totals the pay automatically, so payday is one tap instead of a pile of cash and a whiteboard. Free for the whole family.

No credit card. No ads. No strings.

Outdoor and yard work pay rates

Yard work sits at the top of the chore pay scale because it is heavier work and it only comes around in season. Summer is when most parents start asking what it is worth, and the prices split into two lists that are easy to mix up: the family rate you pay your own child, and the going rate your child can charge a neighbor. They are not the same number.

What to pay your own child for yard and outdoor work
Outdoor task Typical family pay Works from age
Water plants or the garden (per week)$2-$46
Sweep the deck, patio, or walkway$2-$48
Pull weeds from a garden bed$3-$58
Rake and bag leaves$3-$89
Mow a small yard with a push mower$5-$812
Trim bushes or hedges$5-$1014
Full yard cleanup (mow, edge, and haul)$1515

Teens who mow for neighbors charge about $18 to $24 an hour, while parents pay their own kids closer to $10 to $15 an hour for the same yard chores.

Parents often ask why a neighbor pays $25 for a mow their own child does for $5. The family rate is lower on purpose. Yard chores are part of a steady weekly allowance, you supply the mower and the gas, and no one has to drive across town or find the customer. Paid work for a neighbor is a real job, so it pays closer to the going rate: most teens charge $18 to $24 an hour to mow, or $25 to $50 for a standard lawn, and it is fair to add $5 to $10 when your child brings their own mower and fuel.

A clean way to run it is to keep the family rate steady for yard chores on the chart, and let paid jobs for neighbors work like your child's own small summer business. Same skill, better pay, because now they carry the cost and find the work themselves.

How to make a free printable chore chart with prices

You do not need to buy a template. A printable chore chart with prices is just a simple grid you can build in a few minutes: list each paid chore down the left, its dollar amount next to it, and a checkbox for each day of the week across the top. Print it, post it where your child sees it daily, and update the amounts every few months.

What to include on the printable chart:

  • One row per paid chore, using the age-based prices above (start with the ages 7-10 list if you are not sure)
  • A dollar amount beside each task so the pay is never up for debate
  • Seven checkboxes per row, one for each day, plus a parent verify column for younger kids
  • A weekly total box at the bottom so your child can add up what they earned
  • The weekly cap for their age, written at the top, so expectations are clear

A paper chart works, but it means tracking cash and checkmarks by hand. If you would rather skip the reprinting and the shoebox of coins, Penny Time keeps the same chart digitally, totals the pay automatically, and adds it straight to your child's balance.

Combining a weekly allowance with chore pay

Many families run a chore chart and a base allowance together: a small fixed amount every child gets, plus extra they earn from priced chores. A 10-year-old might get a $5 base plus up to $5 in chore pay, which lands near the $8-$12 typical weekly range for that age. Pay both on the same day so the routine stays predictable. Our allowance by age chart shows the typical weekly total to aim for, and the allowance calculator turns it into a personalized number.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Paying for everything: If making the bed earns $1, you have removed any expectation of basic responsibility. Keep core self-care tasks unpaid.
  • Negotiating prices mid-week: Set prices once, review quarterly. Constant renegotiation teaches kids to argue instead of work.
  • Paying before the work is verified: Especially with younger kids, check the work before signing off. A half-vacuumed room is not a completed chore.
  • Inconsistent paydays: Forgetting to pay destroys trust and motivation faster than anything else.
  • Setting prices too high: If your 7-year-old earns $25 a week with minimal effort, there is no incentive to learn the value of money.

What if the chore chart stops working?

Every family hits this. After 4-6 weeks, the novelty wears off and participation drops. Three things that help:

  • Rotate chores monthly. Fresh tasks feel less boring than the same list forever.
  • Tie earnings to a savings goal. When your child saves for something specific - a $30 game, a $50 pair of shoes - the motivation is concrete. The savings goal calculator makes the timeline visible.
  • Add seasonal or one-time bonus chores. Spring cleaning the garage for $15 or raking all the leaves for $10 gives a boost when the regular list feels stale.

The underlying lesson here goes well beyond household tasks. Kids who grow up connecting effort to earnings, managing a predictable income, and making spending choices with their own money develop financial habits that stick into adulthood. A priced chore chart is one of the simplest ways to start that process.

Sources

Frequently Asked Questions

Track chores and allowance in one place

Penny Time lets kids see their chores, mark them done, and watch their earnings grow. Parents set the prices, kids do the work. Free for the whole family.

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