MrBeast Is Gamifying Finances for Teens. Will This Help the Next Generation Become Homeowners Faster?
There may be no more influential figure on the internet than MrBeast—at least among a certain demographic. Now, MrBeast (real name Jimmy Donaldson) is betting that influence can translate into real financial literacy for the next generation.
Beast Industries, Donaldson’s company, recently acquired Step, a financial app for teens and young adults that aims to help users build credit, grow savings, and establish a financial foundation. The app does this through games, trivia, and investing with as little as $1.
Strong saving habits and good credit scores don’t just make for responsible adults—they can meaningfully shorten the timeline to homeownership as well. Compounding interest rewards those who start early, and a solid credit history pays dividends when it’s time to secure a mortgage.
The question isn’t whether financial literacy matters. It’s whether kids will actually listen, and whether MrBeast, through Step, is the right one to teach it.
The need for financial education among young people is well-documented, and the consequences of the gap are significant.
According to a TIAA Institute survey, two-thirds of Gen Z adults could correctly answer only half or fewer of basic financial literacy questions—a lower score than any other generation. Meanwhile, a National Association of Realtors® survey found that more than half of Americans never had a formal class in high school or college covering financial literacy, including the benefits of homeownership.
That knowledge gap has real costs. The Federal Reserve has found that the typical homeowner holds a median net worth of $396,200—compared to just $10,400 for the typical renter. Yet the same NAR report found that roughly a third of prospective buyers across all racial groups weren’t even aware that down payment assistance programs existed.
“If your kids are interested in this area of financial literacy, they are way ahead of the game, and that should be embraced and nurtured,” says Tim Bratz, a real estate investor and founder of Legacy Wealth Holdings.
“MrBeast is filling the gap that should be stepped into by parents and the educational system. It isn’t ideal, but again, if that gets on teenagers’ radars, all the more power to them.”
More than half of the respondents who spoke to the National Association of Realtors on the topic did not personally take a formal class in high school or college that covered financial literacy. (NAR)
This is where Donaldson’s team sees an opening. MrBeast has built the most-subscribed YouTube channel in history by getting people to pay attention. His videos routinely generate tens of millions of views within hours of posting, and his influence over Gen Z and Gen Alpha is difficult to overstate. Ironically, many of his videos show him giving away or otherwise spending vast amounts of money. As a result of his popularity, people watch his videos, buy his hamburgers, and donate to his causes.
With Step, MrBeast says, he wants “to give millions of young people the financial foundation I never had.”
Step is also built around a simple premise: Make personal finance seem more accessible and fun. Users can build credit through a secured card tied to a FDIC-insured account, invest, and earn rewards through games and trivia.
It’s the same psychological scaffolding that made Duolingo a household name—streaks, rewards, progress bars—applied to savings accounts instead of learning a language.
The gamification of learning isn’t new. Research shows that gamelike mechanics improve engagement, retention, and performance. The real question is whether children will stick with what they’ve learned and apply it responsibly.
Access to financial tools has never been easier—but so has access to riskier behavior. The same phone that teaches a teenager about compound interest also offers sports betting apps and crypto exchanges.
Could the next generation be in a better position to own homes with better saving habits? (Getty Images)
For young people already facing affordability barriers, the timing of financial education may matter as much as the content. First-time buyers currently represent just 32% of home purchases, well below the historic norm of nearly 40%, according to NAR. Getting into the market sooner and better prepared may start with habits formed years before anyone is ready to sign a mortgage.
The mechanics are straightforward: A teenager who begins building credit at 16 rather than 22 enters the mortgage process with years of credit history already behind them. That translates directly to a lower interest rate, which over the life of a 30-year loan can mean thousands of dollars in savings. Early investing, even in small amounts, accelerates down payment savings through compounding—the same principle that makes starting late so costly.
Step’s tools are designed with this pipeline in mind. The secured credit card helps young users establish and build credit without the risk of a debt spiral. The $1 investing threshold removes the psychological barrier that keeps many young people out of the market entirely. And the rewards structure incentivizes saving behavior at an age when other apps try to get users to spend.
Whether those early habits actually translate to homeownership will depend on factors well beyond any app—income, housing supply, and interest rates chief among them.
“Starting credit building earlier helps, but it’s not a silver bullet against the housing market’s macro environment,” says Zach Robbins, a finance expert and founder of Loanfolk. “A credit score can be the easiest box to check. The real barriers to homeownership are income and housing costs, and unfortunately, there is no app for that.”
But financial preparedness is the one variable young people can actually control. The earlier they start, the more runway they have.
YouTuber MrBeast during a 2026 interview on the Tonight Show. (NBC via Getty Images)
The case for creator-led financial tools is essentially the case for meeting people where they are. Traditional financial literacy programs have had decades to reach young people and largely haven’t. Schools don’t tend to offer them as part of a core curriculum. If a 16-year-old won’t, or can’t, sit through a personal finance class, but will engage with a savings app because MrBeast’s name is on it, that may not be ideal—but at least it’s an entry point.
There are real reasons for skepticism, however. Creator-driven brands are only as stable as the creator behind them. MrBeast’s reputation, while enormous, is not without controversy, and any significant shift in his public standing or his approach could affect user trust in a product tied directly to his name.
“The risk with creator-led banking is that users place their trust in the media personality’s entertainment factor rather than their financial expertise,” Robbins says. “When a teenager downloads a banking app because their favorite creator promoted it, the decision is emotional, not financial.”
Robbins also advises parents to ask a basic question before letting their kids sign up for any teen fintech product: How is this app making money? Whether it’s through fees or behavioral data collection, understanding the business model is the first act of financial literacy.
Bratz has a slightly differing view about the impact of the business model: “There are inherent risks with sharing data online, but most kids are sharing it with entities and apps that they’re not getting any value from. I’d be willing to take some of that data-sharing risk for an app that’s actually teaching kids how to be a better steward of money,” he says.
For now, the honest answer is that it’s too early to say what the impact will be. The tools are promising, but a generation of financially prepared homeowners is a decades-long outcome—and no app, however well-designed, has been around long enough to prove it can deliver one.