Charlize Theron Reveals Her Kids Must Work and Earn Their Own Way

Charlize Theron has revealed her parenting approach focuses on financial independence for her children. The Oscar-winning actress said her adopted daughters Jackson and August will have to work and earn their own way. She joked that their first car will be a cheap Datsun because they will likely crash it. Theron also discussed her decision to raise her children as a single mother, saying she loves the autonomy.

Key Points: Charlize Theron: Kids Must Work for Living

  • Theron worth 151 million pounds
  • Kids must earn own way
  • First car will be a cheap Datsun
  • She wants them to work at Starbucks
2 min read

Charlize Theron says her kids will have to work for a living

Charlize Theron says her adopted daughters Jackson and August will need to work and earn their own money, starting with a cheap first car.

Charlize Theron says her kids will have to work for a living
"Your first car is going to be a Datsun because you're going to crash it. - Charlize Theron"

Los Angeles, May 4

Oscar-winner Charlize Theron, who is worth an estimated 151 million pounds, has designed a parenting approach centred on financial independence, saying her children will be expected to work and earn their own way.

Theron made the remarks during an appearance on the Therapuss with Jake Shane podcast about her adopted daughters Jackson, 12, and August, nine.

The actress, who has spoken extensively about raising them as a single mother, outlined her parenting approach as focused on independence and work ethic, saying, "First of all, your first car is going to be a Datsun because you're going to crash it."

She added: "You're going to....it up somehow. You're a new driver. So, we're not getting, like, the nice car up front. We need a little bit of experience, and we're going to earn it."

Theron also addressed the question of financial support for her children, reports femalefirst.co.uk.

She added: "It's too soon to kind of say where they're going to end up ... they just need to get a job that pays them because I don't want to support them for the rest of (my) life."

Referring to the idea of early work experience for her kids, she added: "Yeah. Every time we go to Starbucks, I'm like, 'Look at this... do you see how friendly? You have to be that friendly every morning at 6am, like start getting ready for it'."

Her comments follow previous interviews in which Theron has discussed her decision to raise her children independently.

In a July 2025 appearance on Call Her Daddy with Alex Cooper she described the choice as deliberate.

She said: "With women, it's always, like, 'Something must be wrong with her'. "She can't keep a man, and it's never part of the discussion of like, 'Wow. She's really living her truth.'"

Charlize also spoke about the autonomy she feels in her personal life.

She said: "I look at (my children) and just be like, 'Do you know how great it is to live exactly how I want to live, to experience motherhood exactly how I wanted to experience it?' I love that I don't have to run every thing by a guy" and said she felt she had "broke the cycle."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

V
Vikram M
I mean, it's easy to say this when you're worth ₹1250 crore. But the Datsun idea is nice—teaches humility. In India, parents spoil kids with BMWs on their 18th birthday. Theron's approach is refreshing from Hollywood's usual excess.
R
Rohit P
Most Indian parents already do this—make kids work part-time or study hard to earn their place. But the difference is our parents also support us emotionally. Theron seems a bit too extreme with the Starbucks comment. Kids need balance, not just bootcamp.
J
James A
As an NRI living in Mumbai, I see both worlds. Charlize's approach is common in US middle-class families. But the single mother part is interesting—she's breaking stereotypes. In India, single mothers face so much scrutiny. Good for her for living her truth. 🌟
A
Ananya R
I respect the work ethic, but it's a bit privileged to say "just get a job that pays them." In India, finding a good job is tough even with education. Maybe she should focus on the emotional aspects too—kids need more than just financial independence lessons.
K
Kavya N
Love the Datsun idea! My dad gave me an old Maruti 800 when I started driving. Best lesson ever—you learn to appreciate things. Charlize is right that new drivers will mess up. Indian parents should take notes. But she should also teach them about savings.

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