You want to give your child a head start. Not a handout. A head start.
The kind that comes from decisions made early — before it feels urgent, before the numbers get big, before the options narrow.
Most parents think about this at some point. Few actually sit down and work through it. Not because they don’t care — but because nobody explained where to start, what the options are, or how to think about it without needing a financial degree.
This is that conversation.
What this is
A simple way to use AI to start planning for your child’s financial future — so you understand your options, know what to prioritise, and can make decisions that will matter for decades.
The honest truth
Most parents either set up something without fully understanding whether it’s the best option, or they mean to sort it out and keep putting it off because it feels complicated.
The good news: the earlier you start, the less you need to do. Time and compound growth do the heavy lifting. Even small amounts, started early, become significant over time.
Try this
Open ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool and paste this:
What you’ll actually get back
Here’s a real example.
A couple had a three-month-old. They wanted to start saving but weren’t sure how. They described their situation to AI and asked for a clear explanation.
What came back: a breakdown of their country’s education savings plan and government matching, a comparison with using a tax-free account in the parent’s name, a clear note that the government grant was essentially free money, a simple suggestion for how to split contributions, and a projection of what different monthly amounts would grow to over 18 years.
They had been putting it off for months. After one conversation they understood it. They set something up the following week.
Canada — RESP
A Registered Education Savings Plan is a government-registered savings plan for education. The government adds a 20% grant on contributions — up to $500 per year and $7,200 total. That is free money.
Money grows tax-free. Withdrawals are taxed in the child’s hands — usually at a very low rate. Additional grants may apply for lower-income families.
United States — 529 Plan
A tax-advantaged education savings plan. Growth and withdrawals for education are tax-free. Can be used for multiple education types. State tax benefits may apply. Unused funds may be rolled into a Roth IRA under certain conditions.
United Kingdom — Junior ISA
A tax-free savings or investment account for children. Annual contribution limit. Grows tax-free. Child gains access at 18. Can be cash or investments.
The power of starting early
Ask AI:
A small amount started early often beats a much larger amount started late. Time matters more than most people realise.
Involving family
Many family members want to contribute but don’t know how. Ask AI:
Small contributions over time matter more than one large gift later.
Important note
AI explains clearly. It does not replace professional advice. Always verify contribution limits, tax rules, and government grants — these change over time.
The decision you’ve been putting off
If this has been sitting in the background — start now. Not perfectly. Not completely. Just start. A small amount today beats a perfect plan later.
What to read next
→ Financial Planning for Beginners
→ How to Use AI to Understand Financial Products — RRSPs, TFSAs and Beyond
→ Can I Retire? — How to Use AI to Think It Through
→ Or visit the Decision Hub for all decision-prep guides in one place