

Rich Dad Poor Dad for Teens: The Secrets about Money-That You Don't Learn in School! [Kiyosaki, Robert T.] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Rich Dad Poor Dad for Teens: The Secrets about Money-That You Don't Learn in School! Review: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ A Must-Read for Teens Curious About Money and Success - Rich Dad Poor Dad for Teens is a fantastic introduction to personal finance and the mindset needed to build wealth—written in a way that’s easy to understand and relatable for young people. Robert Kiyosaki breaks down big concepts like assets vs. liabilities, passive income, and entrepreneurship without sounding like a lecture. What Makes This Book Great: ✅ Simple language designed specifically for teens—no business jargon. ✅ Uses real-life stories and examples to explain financial principles. ✅ Encourages critical thinking about school, jobs, and the future. ✅ Motivates readers to start building smart money habits early. Who It’s For: Teens ages 13–18 who want to understand how money works. Parents looking for a gift that’s both educational and inspiring. Homeschoolers or educators wanting to teach financial literacy. A Few Caveats: It’s more about mindset than specific financial steps (so it’s best paired with more detailed guides later). Some ideas are a bit idealistic, but they serve as great conversation starters. Overall, this book is a valuable tool to help teens start thinking differently about money, career, and their future. Highly recommended as a first step toward financial independence! Review: So good for teens to learn about money - I’m not done with this book yet but I’m 13 and wanted to learn more about real estate it’s not so much about real estate more about how to take care of money and have money work for you overall a good book
| Best Sellers Rank | #17,025 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #82 in Introduction to Investing #241 in Personal Finance (Books) #5,692 in Children's Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (4,578) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.25 x 9 inches |
| Edition | 46625th |
| Grade level | 7 - 9 |
| ISBN-10 | 1612680305 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1612680309 |
| Item Weight | 4.5 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | Rich Dad Poor Dad |
| Print length | 112 pages |
| Publication date | February 27, 2012 |
| Publisher | Plata Publishing |
| Reading age | 12 - 17 years |
N**C
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ A Must-Read for Teens Curious About Money and Success
Rich Dad Poor Dad for Teens is a fantastic introduction to personal finance and the mindset needed to build wealth—written in a way that’s easy to understand and relatable for young people. Robert Kiyosaki breaks down big concepts like assets vs. liabilities, passive income, and entrepreneurship without sounding like a lecture. What Makes This Book Great: ✅ Simple language designed specifically for teens—no business jargon. ✅ Uses real-life stories and examples to explain financial principles. ✅ Encourages critical thinking about school, jobs, and the future. ✅ Motivates readers to start building smart money habits early. Who It’s For: Teens ages 13–18 who want to understand how money works. Parents looking for a gift that’s both educational and inspiring. Homeschoolers or educators wanting to teach financial literacy. A Few Caveats: It’s more about mindset than specific financial steps (so it’s best paired with more detailed guides later). Some ideas are a bit idealistic, but they serve as great conversation starters. Overall, this book is a valuable tool to help teens start thinking differently about money, career, and their future. Highly recommended as a first step toward financial independence!
V**A
So good for teens to learn about money
I’m not done with this book yet but I’m 13 and wanted to learn more about real estate it’s not so much about real estate more about how to take care of money and have money work for you overall a good book
G**A
Buena elección para tu adolescente
B**U
Play it in the car for the whole family ... just see what happens.
Even if you just play the audiobook in the car while your kids pretend not to listen, it can't hurt. That's what I've been doing and then I'll turn it off and my 11-year old asked me to better explain Assets versus Liabilities as we got out of the car. See! He WAS listening! The "That You Don't Learn in School!" subtitle helped my kids at least pretend to listen. I've always been a self-educator (sounds a bit like "self-medicator" but ... different--or is it?) and I'm usually pushing anything onto my kids that I can. I believe that "regular education" doesn't necessarily prepare most of us for "real life." Stuff like marriage, parenting, and finance. Maybe it's not supposed to. Maybe it's supposed to be for rote learning, art history, and advanced calculus. I don't know. No, really, I don't know. I'm pretty much a fan of anything that wants to teach me something as I think that I'll at least learn something. If there are 10 things and I learn 1, it's more than 0. See? A bit of math I just snuck in there. Robert T. Kiyosaki is a legend when it comes to finance and " ... has held a top spot on the New York Times bestsellers list for over six years - is an investor, entrepreneur, and educator whose perspectives on money and investing fly in the face of conventional wisdom." (from his Amazon author page) In this book for teens, he does just that and especially covers those three topics: investing, entrepreneurship, and education. My kids didn't listen but they heard. Although I don't think my kids took notes (OK, no, they didn't) or will actually knowingly, consciously implement any of Kiyasaki's very well-thought-through ideas and strategies, just hearing it is a big help. After listening one day in the car (where I have a captive audience, hint hint), there was mention of a rental property one day and my youngest boy (12) kind of understood what the topic was. Thanks to Rich Dad, Poor Dad: Teens.
W**L
Kids love reading this book
I bought and read almost all of Kiyosaki books along with his board game Cash Flow. Kids love it.
C**L
Must Read
Give this book to your teen. I wish someone gave this to me when I was 13. It would have prepared me better for life. I gave this to a friend to read too. The earlier you can get a thought process right, the earlier someone can get on the journey of success. If you like to work a job, that's great, but don't sentence your child to a lifetime of trading their time away when they have the potential and possibility to be astronomically successful.
V**S
A Rip Off
Robert Kiyosaki has been milking this "franchise" dry. The idea was interesting and novel at first, but lately it's been ghost-written junk. The "Teens" book is a total waste: I thought I'd give it a chance because it was affordable and I thought the gearing towards teens might make it useful for my kids; it arrived today and I was shocked -- the book is literally about 3 inches wide by 3 inches tall (less than the size of two Tic Tac boxes put together). In total, there must be about 10 "real" pages within its miniature 124 pages. What a rip off. I'm getting sick of seeing this guy in newspaper ads, magazines (he used to "write" a monthly for Entrepreneur Magazine, but his columns soon deteriorated to a few inches of writing, next to a giant picture of himself, so they cut him out. Robert Kiyosaki has become lazy and derivative. He needs to give it a break and come back with something new in a couple of years.
I**E
The size of the book is 7, 5 * 8 cm as decribed, and the cover is the one pictured. But the text into is not the one you can read in the preview; it's another text, where sentences are modified to be shorter. If you consider that the teen version is shorter than the adult one, and this one is shorter than the teen's one, it means that the version I bought is resized twice from the original... It's no more for teens, but for kids!
B**I
This is a nice book that helps us know and manage money in simple language ideal for teens and anyone who wishes to learn and handle finances... It helped me a great deal and the ways described are pretty easy-to-follow and remember..
A**R
I've become a fan of Mr Kiyosaki. Having put off reading his RDPD book for many years because I was put off by the title, I finally gave in a couple of weeks ago and read it in two sittings. I found the information so important I decided to get this for my daughter who so far has been uninspired by my other hero Dave Ramsey. When I buy a book, I tend to read the summary, the reviews, how many pages (is it likely to be in depth?) I don't recall ever looking at the dimensions! This book is 127 pages long. Nothing unusual there. It seems an ideal length for teens to grasp the basic principles. When it arrived my daughter shrieked "what's this?" It's about the size in terms of total volume as a bar of soap. That came as a bit of a surprise. Fast forward to the evening, and my daughter has read it and memorised it and is quoting parts to me and is showing an interest in our fledgling property "empire". Mission accomplished! She then requested to read the full version of RDPD. Very much a case of when the student is ready, the right master appears apparently. So yes a tiny book but it sparked her imagination and has hopefully set her on the first steps to wealth. I so wish I had had access to this information at that age (14). Thank you Mr Kiyosaki.
M**U
Loved this book
V**A
Excelente llego mas rapido de lo esperado y en perfectas condiciones.
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