The next time a kid in your neighbourhood sells lemonade, you may be able to tap your phone instead of digging for change.
That is the idea behind Lemonade Lab, a free BC-built platform founded by Dean Horsfield that helps kids launch small, parent-supervised businesses.
The platform lets young entrepreneurs create real shop pages, list what they are selling, manage orders or bookings, and accept digital payments. That includes credit cards, digital wallets, and tap payments.
In other words, the classic lemonade stand is becoming cashless.
The shift is small but meaningful. Plenty of people still want to support a kid selling lemonade, cookies, crafts, or services in the neighbourhood. The problem is that many of those same customers no longer carry coins or bills.
Lemonade Lab is built around that modern commerce gap.
Rather than giving kids another allowance app, the platform gives them a supervised way to earn money by building something of their own. Along the way, they learn how to price a product, talk to customers, track sales, handle orders, and understand how digital payments work.
Parents are still in the loop. Lemonade Lab gives families visibility into activity and progress, with parent approval required for payouts. The company also describes Lemonade Lab Safe as a built-in safety layer designed to keep the experience private, positive, and protected.
Horsfield brings a builder’s background to the company. Before focusing on Lemonade Lab, he co-founded Processed App, an AI-driven consumer product that he recently sold. With Lemonade Lab, the focus has shifted to helping kids experience entrepreneurship in a practical but age-appropriate way.
The company says more than 100 kid-run shops have already launched through the platform, with educators also onboarding.
That school angle could make the platform more than a weekend lemonade stand tool. Lemonade Lab has built a version for educators that includes entrepreneurship programs, student sites and payments, teacher dashboards, curriculum tools, and support for classrooms or after-school programs.
Most youth fintech products teach kids how to manage money. Lemonade Lab is trying to teach them how to earn it.
That makes the company part of a broader shift in financial learning for young people. Instead of keeping kids inside simulated environments, Lemonade Lab gives them a safer path into real-world commerce, where customers, pricing, communication, and payments all come together.
For generations, the lemonade stand has been a first lesson in business. Kids learned that supplies cost money, customers matter, and a sale feels different when you earned it yourself.
Lemonade Lab is updating that experience for the tap-to-pay era.
The rite of passage may be the same. The checkout experience is starting to look a lot more modern.
The post BC-Built Lemonade Lab Turns The Lemonade Stand Into A Tap-To-Pay Business appeared first on Techcouver.com.
BC-Built Lemonade Lab Turns The Lemonade Stand Into A Tap-To-Pay Business was first posted on June 18, 2026 at 5:00 am.
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