Child Benefit and the High-Income Charge Explained (2026)
Quick answer Child Benefit in 2026 to 2027 is £27.05 a week for your eldest child...

Children worry about climate change far more than adults realise. UK surveys consistently rank it among children’s top fears, alongside their parents getting ill and the family losing a home. The temptation as a parent is either to dodge the topic or to over-explain. Neither helps. Here is a calm, age-appropriate framework for the conversation, plus what to do with the feelings it brings up, and the books and resources actually worth recommending.
Children pick up far more than we credit them with. School (where climate change is now firmly in the curriculum from KS2 onwards), friends, the news on the radio in the car, overheard adult conversations. By age seven or eight, most British children have heard “climate change” multiple times and have some idea it is bad. What they often do not have is a clear, calm explanation from a trusted adult.
The 2022 Lancet study on climate anxiety in children showed nearly 60 percent of UK 16-25 year olds felt “very worried” or “extremely worried” about climate change. Among 8-12 year olds, qualitative studies show high anxiety and a strong sense of helplessness. Avoiding the conversation does not protect them. It leaves them processing it alone.
For younger children, the goal is honesty without catastrophising. Three sentences are usually enough:
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That is the floor of the conversation. They can ask follow-ups, and you can answer with the same calm honesty. Do not pretend everything is fine. Do not pretend everything is doomed. Both are bad for them.
Older kids will press for more. They want to know about specifics, about timelines, about whether it is too late. Be honest that the situation is serious, that scientists are clear about what needs to happen, and that human responses are also real and substantial. Avoid the “it is too late” framing. It is not, and despair is paralysing.
Ask them what worries them most. Listen to the answer before you respond. Then ask what they think their family or their school could do. Children with a sense of agency cope far better than children who are told only about the problem.
Be honest about complexity. “Plastic bottles are bad” is technically true and woefully incomplete. Better: “single-use plastics are part of the problem, and so is how things are made, transported and powered. Lots of different things need to change.”
Teens have access to information and influencers. They have heard the doom-and-bloom takes online. The job here is harder: keep the conversation open without lecturing, take their fears seriously, and connect them with young people who are doing something rather than only worrying.
Teens with climate anxiety often respond well to action that has a community attached. School Strike for Climate, UK Youth Climate Coalition, local sustainability projects. Action plus community is the antidote to climate despair.
The right book for the right age makes the conversation a hundred times easier.
The conversation lands better when it is paired with action. Five family habits that genuinely move the needle:
None of these are dramatic. All of them are doable. The point is consistency, not perfection.
Most climate worry in children is a healthy emotional response to real information. But it can tip into something that needs proper support. Signs to take seriously:
Talk to the school first. Most have access to early-intervention mental-health support. If it is more severe, ask your GP for a referral to CAMHS, although the waiting lists are long. The Anna Freud Centre has free resources for parents of children with climate anxiety specifically.
The fastest way to reduce a child’s climate anxiety is to give them something small, real and family-shaped to do. A weekly Meatless Monday. A walk to school once a week. A jam jar of “saved money” from not buying single-use plastic. The action does not need to fix the world. It needs to give them a sense that they are part of the solution, not just the inheritors of the problem.
Hope is not the same as optimism. Hope is the recognition that the situation is serious AND that there is meaningful work to do. That is the conversation you want to land with your child.
Some of the product links in this post are Amazon affiliate links. If you buy through them I may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. See my full disclosure.
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