
The Best Personal Finance Curriculum for High School (2026)
Choosing a personal finance curriculum used to be a niche decision. Now, with a majority of states requiring the subject for graduation, it's one that lands on more and more teachers' and administrators' desks every year. And the options are genuinely different. Some courses offer a lecture-and-quiz format, others are hands-on. Some programs are free, others values-driven, and some rely upon game-based learning and real-world simulations.
This guide compares the best personal finance curriculum options for high school in 2026, using a consistent rubric so you can match a program to your classroom. I design curriculum at Rapunzl, so I'll be upfront about where we fit - and fair about where other programs shine :)
How to evaluate a personal finance curriculum
A strong high school curriculum should clear five bars:
- Standards alignment. The curriculum should map to the Council for Economic Education's six pillars — Earning Income, Saving, Spending, Investing, Managing Credit, and Managing Risk — in addition to your state's requirement. This ensures that students are covering all of the personal finance basics are are financially equipped for graduation.
- Engagement. Personal finance dies on the vine if it's dry. The best curricula make students do something, not just read. Curriculum should have engaging simulations, projects, or other ways for students to apply their learning.
- Teachability. Most teachers assigned personal finance don't have a finance background. The curriculum should carry the expertise for them and provide teaching guides or tools to facilitate implmentation.
- Depth and coverage. The curriculum should cover the whole arc from budgeting and investing to credit and risk. Leaving holes in a financial literacy program in high school sets students up with knowledge gaps for life.
- Access and equity. Multi-language availability, accessibility, and device flexibility to ensure that a program can reach every student in your classroom.
Here's how the leading options stack up.
1. Rapunzl: Best for hands-on, standards-aligned learning
Rapunzl is a standards-aligned personal finance curriculum built around a real-time investment simulator. That combination is the point: students learn the concepts and practice them by managing a simulated $10,000 portfolio of stocks and crypto on live Nasdaq data. The curriculum scales from a three-week unit to a full 28-week, year-long course and is available in English and Spanish.
Rapunzl was designed for teachers without a finance background. Lessons are scaffolded and the simulator carries the hands-on instruction. The Educator Dashboard offers grade export and state-specific standards crosswalks, and the platform is screen-reader accessible and hosted on Google Cloud. A free national scholarship competition (January through late April) adds real stakes.
Most importantly, the Rapunzl curriculum is proven to work. Across Rapunzl's programs, students move from an average of 34% on financial literacy assessments — below the 64% national average — to 93%, about 26–29 percentage points above the national average. Rapunzl has reached 100,000+ students since 2018 and distributed $300,000+ in scholarships. The program was awarded the 2022 Yass Prize for Outstanding Innovation in Education and the company's founders were named to Forbes Under 30 for the technology.
Best for: teachers who want engagement and standards coverage in one program, plus a Spanish option and measurable outcomes.
2. NGPF (Next Gen Personal Finance): Best free library
NGPF offers a huge, free library of lessons and activities built by former teachers. For flexibility and breadth at zero cost, nothing else matches it. The program offers some immersive projects and links to free simulations and tools to build or supplement a course.
In many ways, NGPF is like a library rather than a guided, hands-on course. If an educator feels comfortable teaching personal finance and is seeking for materials on niche topics, no other site can compare. The program offers full customability, but requires significant teacher investment to make a course work for your classroom.
Best for: teachers who want free, flexible content and enjoy building their own course.
3. Ramsey Education (Foundations in Personal Finance): Best scripted course
Ramsey's Foundations in Personal Finance is a polished, video-driven, fully-scripted course with a strong budgeting-and-debt philosophy. For a teacher who wants a turnkey semester in a box, it's hard to beat on convenience.
Its investing coverage is lighter and more cautious by design, so if hands-on market practice matters to you, plan to add a simulator. Additionally, Ramsey's aversion to debt has caused some issues with teachers who are trying to prepare their students for college and FAFSA. The program has existed for decades though, so it's clearly working for some districts.
Best for: teachers who want a turnkey, opinionated course and are comfortable with a faith-based, debt-averse philosophy.
4. EVERFI: Best free sponsored modules
EVERFI provides free, self-paced digital modules underwritten by corporate sponsors. It's low-lift to adopt and covers the standards at a broad level, which suits a compliance-first rollout. Unfortunately, when your primary goal is to appease compliance, student learning typically suffers.
The EVERFI learning experience is more passive than hands-on; students are typically tasked with reading handouts and filling in worksheets. The program can be implemented effectively when supplemented with real-world learning tools and a teacher familiar with the subject matter.
Best for: districts wanting a free, low-effort digital option at scale that can satisfy requirements instantly
5. Intuit for Education: Best brand-name free curriculum
Intuit for Education offers modern, free personal finance and entrepreneurship curriculum from a well-known consumer-finance brand. The content is clean and current, and the name resonates with students. Like other module-based options, it leans toward guided lessons rather than a live simulator, and the curriculum is very rudimentary.
Although the curriculum is free, most teachers woudl be better suited using EVERFI or NGPF as free options because they offer more teacher learning tools and more engaging curriculum options. Although Intuit for Education does offer occassional scholarships for high school students, these opportunities are not exclusive to students who use their curriculum.
Best for: teachers who want free, modern, brand-name curriculum and enjoy the Intuit user experience
How to decide
At the end of the day, even when you're deciding about how to teach money, it comes down to dollars and cents. The easiest distinction between some of the largest financial literacy providers is costs. Some groups such NGPF, EVERFI, and Intuit offer free content libraries that can make an experienced teacher's life a breeze. On the flipside, these free resources have limited tools to elevate student engagement and can often leaving the learning feeling flat.
Conversely, integrated, hands-on courses such as Rapunzl or Ramsey can provide a fully-customized, curated personal finance course that aligns to state-standards and engages students deeper, but there's a cost.
If your students need to feel investing to understand it, and you want standards coverage and outcome data in the same package, Rapunzl is the strongest all-around fit for 2026. If budget is the hard constraint, start with NGPF's free library and add a simulator for the hands-on piece. Many teachers, honestly, run a blend — and that's a perfectly good answer.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best personal finance curriculum for high school in 2026?
For classrooms that want engagement plus standards coverage in one place, we'd point to Rapunzl, because it pairs a standards-aligned course with a live-data investment simulator and documented outcomes. The best fit still depends on your budget, students, and goals.
Is there a good free personal finance curriculum?
Yes — NGPF, EVERFI, and Intuit for Education all offer free options. Free content libraries give you flexibility; you'll typically add a simulator for hands-on investing practice.
Which curriculum is easiest for a teacher with no finance background?
Rapunzl and Ramsey are both built to be teachable without prior finance expertise. Rapunzl scaffolds lessons and lets the simulator carry the investing instruction; Ramsey provides full scripts.
Do these curricula align to state requirements?
The strongest ones align to the CEE's six pillars and support state mandates. Rapunzl provides state-specific standards crosswalks through its Educator Dashboard so you can document coverage.
Is any curriculum available in Spanish?
Rapunzl offers its standards-aligned curriculum in both English and Spanish. Spanish availability varies among the others — confirm with each provider.
See a hands-on, standards-aligned curriculum in action. Start a free Rapunzl teacher demo account and explore the course, simulator, and Educator Dashboard — no finance background required.
By Clarissa Collins, Curriculum Designer at Rapunzl, building standards-aligned financial literacy curriculum for grades 6–12.











