13 Mar 2026

Nationwide launches teacher accreditation to boost financial education in schools

  • Nationwide becomes first UK bank or building society to launch a financial education accreditation for teachers
  • New research reveals 89%of Parents surveyed say it’s more important than ever to learn personal finance, with 81% worried about the standard of content on social media
  • Teachers cite lack of time and confidence as key barriers to teaching personal finance – accreditation provides full package of lessons and activities
  • Accreditation expands Nationwide’s Money Lessons programme in partnership with Visa

Nationwide is launching a national accreditation for primary school teachers that aims to boost confidence in teaching financial education and help more children develop lifelong money skills. The accredited financial education training, which enhances Nationwide’s existing Money Lessons programme, is the first initiative of its kind from a UK bank or building society.

It comes as new research from Nationwide reveals 891 per cent of parents surveyed say it has never been more important for children to learn about personal finance at school, with 812 per cent worried about the quality of personal finance content on social media.

Developed in partnership with Visa, the accreditation launches for primary school teachers in April and for secondary school teachers by the end of 2026 - and is designed to ease pressures in the classroom. Teachers can access the accredited financial education training on Nationwide’s Money Lessons webpage as well as the full package of ready to use lessons and activities – already available - reducing the need to create content from scratch and helping deliver consistent, high quality financial education lessons and activities.

To become accredited, teachers complete a two-hour online course covering practical topics such as managing money, avoiding scams and recognising misleading online content, followed by a short competency test.

Research from the Money and Pensions Service shows that although many schools want to deliver more financial education, they often face barriers such as limited time, low confidence and a lack of resources. The organisation also warns that low financial capability can leave young people more at risk of fraud, debt problems and unsafe financial products, and highlights teacher training as one of the most effective ways to improve the quality and consistency of financial education.

Meanwhile, the Financial Conduct Authority has raised concerns that young people are increasingly exposed to misleading financial promotions online, particularly through social media.

Nationwide’s poll of 2,000 parents who have children aged between 5-15 years old found that one in four parents (25%) say their children now learn about money through social media, with the top sites being YouTube, TikTok, Facebook and Instagram. According to TikTok for Business insights, views of financial content on the channel grew by around 275 per cent year-on-year in 2024.

Parents rank personal finance as the fourth most important subject for teaching at school - above English literature, PE, home economics and history - despite it not featuring on the National Curriculum. It falls behind only maths, English language and science in the pecking order. Their top three reasons for teaching personal finance are to understand debt and the long-term consequences; learning to budget and staying in control of money; and learning responsible attitudes towards spending.

Many parents have felt the impact of a lack of personal finance education; just over seven in ten (72%) struggled to understand personal finance growing up, and 70 per cent say it negatively affected them later in life.

All materials for Nationwide’s Money Lessons have been created with input from psychologists and Special Educational Needs (SEN) teaching specialists and can be downloaded from www.nationwide.co.uk/moneylessons. Nationwide will track the number of accreditations by receiving information on completions, including the number of teachers, schools and accredited modules. Teachers will also receive a certificate issued by CPD Certification Service.

The programme has delivered 6719 lessons to 196,052 pupils across the UK since February 2025. The new accreditation evolves the programme by shifting from lessons delivered by Nationwide colleagues to empowering teachers to confidently run them in their own classrooms.

Amanda Beech, Director of Retail Services at Nationwide, said: “It’s clear that parents want to see financial education taught in schools, as many worry about what their children are learning on social media. We also know teachers want to give children clear, trustworthy guidance, but need more support and time. This new accreditation provides teachers simple, ready-to-use tools helping pupils to make safer everyday money decisions and gives parents reassurance that trusted teachers, using trusted materials, are shaping their children’s financial habits – both for now and into their futures.”

Sarah Webster, Headteacher at Christ The King RC Primary School in Burnley, said: “Teachers recognise the importance of teaching money skills, but recent research shows that many lack the time, resources or confidence to deliver this effectively. Nationwide’s new accreditation, supported by fully prepared lessons and high-quality planning materials, provides a practical solution to that challenge. It enables teachers to embed financial education with ease, ensuring children develop essential money skills from an early age. This is particularly important at a time when so much of what they encounter online is unregulated. This initiative not only strengthens classroom practice, it also helps schools play a meaningful role in improving financial confidence and inclusion.”

Notes to editors

Research from the Money and Pensions Service (MaPS) Financial education in schools | Money and Pensions Service shows:

  1. Teacher training is one of the most effective ways to improve financial education delivery (MaPS, 2023b)
  2. Many schools want to teach more about money but face barriers including a lack of time, confidence and resources (MAS, 2018a)
  3. Too many young people reach adulthood without basic money skills and face higher risks of poor financial outcomes (MaPS, 2022a).

TikTok:

According to TikTok’s own business insights, videos under the #FinTok finance hashtag saw around a 275% year-on-year increase in views as users seek to improve their financial literacy and explore money-related topics. Link here

 Censuswide:

The research was conducted by Censuswide, among a sample of 2,000 parents who have children aged between 5-15 years old. The data was collected between 28.01.2026 - 02.02.2026. Censuswide is a member of the Market Research Society (MRS) and the British Polling Council (BPC), and a signatory of the Global Data Quality Pledge. We adhere to the MRS Code of Conduct and ESOMAR principles.

FCA

https://www.fca.org.uk/news/press-releases/fca-steps-action-against-misleading-financial-adverts

 

[1] Combining answer options  “Strongly agree” and “Somewhat agree”