AP Business with Personal Finance • Unit 5

Personal Goals, Budgeting, and Investing

Review taxes, net income, budgeting, risk management, insurance, saving, investing, education, housing, retirement, and charitable giving.

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Developing Understanding

Unit 5 connects personal finance concepts across the course. Students interpret pay stubs, plan budgets, manage risk, compare insurance needs, and develop long-term strategies for education, housing, retirement, and charitable giving.

Financial Advisor Project; Unit 5 may be taught before or after the AP Exam

Course Guide Snapshot

Financial Advisor Project unit

Key Concepts to Know

These are the main topics students should be able to explain and apply.

5.1

Taxes, Net Income, and Budgeting

Students interpret pay, taxes, deductions, net income, and household budgets.

5.2

Managing Personal Risk

Students analyze risk, insurance coverage, premiums, deductibles, and household protection.

5.3

Saving and Investing for Goals

Students evaluate strategies for education, housing, retirement, and charitable giving.

Business Case Connections

Use these cases to connect vocabulary and concepts to business scenarios.

Financial Advisor Project

Students serve as financial consultants for a fictional household.

Personal Finance Application

Students evaluate budgets, debt, insurance, risk tolerance, time horizon, and investment choices.

Project Connections

These project tasks connect the unit to the Business Canvas Project or Financial Advisor Project.

Household Profile

Analyze a fictional household’s income, expenses, assets, liabilities, goals, and risks.

Budget Recommendation

Recommend changes to spending, saving, and debt repayment.

Risk Recommendation

Identify insurance needs and financial risks.

Investment Recommendation

Recommend saving and investing strategies based on timeline and risk tolerance.

Final Presentation

Present a written recommendation and oral presentation.

Unit 5 Vocabulary

Review all major terms and be ready to apply them in scenarios.

Gross Income

Income earned before taxes and deductions.

Net Income

Income left after taxes and deductions.

Taxes

Required payments to government.

Withholding

Money taken from a paycheck for taxes or other deductions.

Deduction

An amount subtracted from income or pay.

Pay Stub

A document showing earnings, taxes, deductions, and net pay.

Budget

A plan for income, spending, saving, and debt repayment.

Needs

Essential expenses required for living.

Wants

Nonessential expenses that improve lifestyle.

Fixed Expense

An expense that stays about the same each month.

Variable Expense

An expense that changes month to month.

Discretionary Spending

Optional spending on wants.

Savings Rate

The percentage of income saved.

Emergency Fund

Savings for unexpected expenses.

Risk

Possibility of loss or financial harm.

Risk Tolerance

Willingness and ability to accept risk.

Insurance

Protection against financial loss.

Premium

The cost paid for insurance coverage.

Deductible

Amount paid out of pocket before insurance pays.

Coverage

The protection provided by an insurance policy.

Liability

Legal responsibility for damages or injury.

Health Insurance

Coverage for medical costs.

Auto Insurance

Coverage related to vehicle damage or liability.

Renters Insurance

Coverage for renters’ belongings and liability.

Homeowners Insurance

Coverage for a home, belongings, and liability.

Life Insurance

Coverage that pays beneficiaries after the insured person dies.

Disability Insurance

Coverage replacing income if a person cannot work due to disability.

Investment

An asset purchased to earn a return.

Return

Gain or loss from an investment.

Diversification

Spreading money across investments to reduce risk.

Asset Allocation

How investments are divided among asset types.

Stock

Ownership share in a company.

Bond

A loan made to a government or business.

Mutual Fund

A pooled investment that owns many securities.

ETF

An exchange-traded fund that holds a basket of assets.

Time Horizon

Length of time before money is needed.

529 Plan

A tax-advantaged savings plan for education.

Mortgage

A loan used to buy real estate.

Down Payment

Money paid upfront toward a purchase.

Retirement

The stage when a person stops working full time and uses savings/income sources.

401(k)

Employer-sponsored retirement account.

IRA

Individual retirement account.

Charitable Giving

Donating money or resources to a cause.

AP-Style Practice Questions

Try these multiple-choice questions. Click each answer box to check your work.

Question 1

A worker earns $4,200 before taxes and $3,300 after deductions. What is $3,300?

  1. Gross income
  2. Net income
  3. Premium
  4. Deductible
Show Answer

Answer: B. Net income is income after taxes and deductions.

Question 2

Rent is usually a:

  1. Variable expense
  2. Fixed expense
  3. Investment return
  4. Credit limit
Show Answer

Answer: B. Rent typically stays the same each month.

Question 3

Which is the purpose of insurance?

  1. Guarantee profits
  2. Reduce financial loss from risk
  3. Eliminate taxes
  4. Increase credit card debt
Show Answer

Answer: B. Insurance transfers or reduces financial risk.

Question 4

The amount paid monthly for insurance is the:

  1. Premium
  2. Deductible
  3. Dividend
  4. Principal
Show Answer

Answer: A. Premiums are regular payments for coverage.

Question 5

Diversification helps investors by:

  1. Spreading risk
  2. Guaranteeing no losses
  3. Removing taxes
  4. Eliminating inflation
Show Answer

Answer: A. Diversification spreads money across investments to reduce risk.

Question 6

A 529 plan is most closely connected to:

  1. Education savings
  2. Auto insurance
  3. Business ethics
  4. Market segmentation
Show Answer

Answer: A. 529 plans are tax-advantaged education savings plans.

Question 7

A mortgage is used to:

  1. Buy real estate
  2. Pay a medical copay
  3. Create a marketing campaign
  4. Measure KPIs
Show Answer

Answer: A. A mortgage is a loan used to purchase property.

Question 8

Which person likely has the longest time horizon?

  1. A student saving for retirement
  2. A buyer closing on a house next week
  3. A driver paying monthly insurance
  4. A worker buying groceries tonight
Show Answer

Answer: A. Retirement for a student is far in the future.

Question 9

Which is an example of a need?

  1. Rent
  2. Concert tickets
  3. Designer shoes
  4. Streaming upgrade
Show Answer

Answer: A. Rent is generally an essential living expense.

Question 10

A family building a plan for college, home buying, retirement, and donations is most closely doing:

  1. Financial planning
  2. Supply chain planning
  3. Promotion
  4. Market research
Show Answer

Answer: A. Financial planning coordinates goals, budgets, risk, and investing.

Study Tips

Focus on applying ideas to business and personal finance scenarios.

Scenario First

Read the situation before looking at the answers. Decide what problem, strategy, or decision is being described.

Know the Vocabulary

Most wrong answers use real business words incorrectly. Be sure you know how each term applies.

Connect to Projects

The Business Canvas and Financial Advisor tasks are good practice for applied AP-style thinking.

Explain Why

For every practice question, explain why the correct answer is right and why the distractors are wrong.

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