How Credit Really Works: Borrowing, Interest, and the Cost of “Buy Now”

Grade: 8
Time: 45–60 minutes
Standards Alignment (generic): Financial literacy, consumer economics, decision-making


Learning Objectives (Student-Friendly)

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:


Key Vocabulary (Non-Negotiable)


Hook (5 minutes)

Scenario on the board:

You want a new gaming console that costs $500.
You have two choices:

  1. Save for 5 months and buy it.
  2. Put it on a credit card today.

Ask students:

Do not answer yet. Let discomfort sit.


Mini-Lesson: How Credit Works (10 minutes)

https://gifttool.com/images/support/tid60/Credit%20Card%20Transaction%20Process%20SMALL.jpg
https://www.penfed.org/content/dam/penfed/en/articles/lc/infographics/how-to-work-around-credit-card-interest-infographic.webp
https://www.thebalancemoney.com/thmb/7LVw5XcNasZlKyvjU0lDiMP7Oc0%3D/1500x0/filters%3Ano_upscale%28%29%3Amax_bytes%28150000%29%3Astrip_icc%28%29/CalculateCardPayments-5fd5f524f6b841ec8919fcd3bc17e16f.jpg

1. What Credit Is (Plain English)

Credit = using future money today.
The lender charges interest because they want profit and because you might not pay them back.

No mystery. No morality. Just math + risk.


2. Interest (Where People Get Burned)

If you borrow $500 at 20% interest, you don’t just pay back $500.

You pay:

If you only make minimum payments, the interest keeps stacking.


3. Minimum Payments (The Trap)

Minimum payments:

Credit companies love minimum payments.
They are designed to keep you paying interest as long as possible.


Guided Activity: The $500 Console (15 minutes)

Give students this table:

Payment ChoiceMonthly PaymentTime to Pay OffTotal Cost
Minimum Only$15~4 years~$720
$50/month$50~11 months~$560
Save First$05 months$500

Discussion Questions:

This is where thinking happens.


Reality Check: When Credit Is Useful vs. Dangerous (10 minutes)

Credit Can Be Useful When:

Credit Is Dangerous When:

Future you always pays the bill.


Exit Ticket (5 minutes)

Students answer one in complete sentences:

  1. One way credit can help someone
  2. One way credit can hurt someone
  3. One rule they would give a friend about using credit

Optional Extension (Homework or Next Day)

Have students: