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Emergency Fund Planner
Step 3: Build emergency fund
- This is the third step in the Money roadmap
- Previous: Net Worth
- Next: Debt Payoff
What is an Emergency Fund?
An emergency fund is money set aside for unexpected expenses: job loss, medical bills, car repairs, home emergencies. Itβs your financial safety net that prevents you from going into debt when life happens.
Why You Need One
- Job loss buffer: 6 months of expenses means 6 months to find new work
- Avoid debt: Use savings instead of credit cards for emergencies
- Peace of mind: Sleep better knowing youβre covered
- Better decisions: Can walk away from bad situations
- Prevents financial ruin: One emergency wonβt derail your life
The Two-Step Approach
Step 1: $1,000 Starter Emergency Fund
Do this first, even if you have debt.
- Why: Prevents using credit cards for small emergencies
- How long: 1-3 months for most people
- Priority: Before aggressive debt payoff
Step 2: 3-6 Months Full Emergency Fund
Do this after paying off all debt except mortgage.
- Why: Full protection against major events like job loss
- How long: 6-24 months depending on savings rate
- Priority: After debt-free (except house)
Emergency Fund Calculator
Step State
You are on Step 3 of the Money roadmap: βBuild emergency fundβ. Your progress will be tracked here soon.
How to Determine Your Target
The Formula
Monthly Essential Expenses Γ Number of Months = Emergency Fund Target
How Many Months?
3 Months if you have:
- Stable government or tenured job
- Dual income household
- No dependents
- Good health
- Strong job market in your field
6 Months (most common) if you have:
- Typical employment situation
- Some job security
- 1-2 dependents
- Generally healthy
- Moderate job market
9-12 Months if you have:
- Self-employed or commission-based income
- Single income household
- Multiple dependents
- Chronic health issues
- Niche or competitive field
- Economic uncertainty
What Counts as βEssential Expensesβ?
Include (Needs)
β
Housing (rent/mortgage, property tax, insurance)
β
Utilities (electric, gas, water, basic internet)
β
Food (groceries only)
β
Transportation (car payment, insurance, gas)
β
Insurance (health, life, disability)
β
Minimum debt payments
β
Healthcare and medications
β
Childcare
Exclude (Wants)
β Dining out
β Entertainment and subscriptions
β Shopping and hobbies
β Vacation savings
β Extra debt payments beyond minimums
Why This Matters
If you lose your job, youβll cut non-essentials immediately. Your emergency fund only needs to cover what you canβt cut.
Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund
Best Options
-
High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA)
- Pros: FDIC insured, liquid, earning interest
- Cons: Slightly lower rates than investments
- Best for: Most people
-
Money Market Account
- Pros: Similar to HYSA, may have check-writing
- Cons: May require minimum balance
- Best for: Larger emergency funds ($20k+)
-
Laddered Certificates of Deposit (CDs)
- Pros: Higher interest rates
- Cons: Early withdrawal penalties
- Best for: Larger funds, partial access strategy
Where NOT to Keep It
β Checking account: Too easy to spend, no interest
β Under your mattress: No interest, not FDIC insured
β Stock market: Too volatile, could need money when market is down
β Retirement accounts: Penalties and taxes for early withdrawal
β Cryptocurrency: Extremely volatile, not suitable for emergencies
Common Mistakes
β Investing your emergency fund
Problem: Market crash when you need the money most
Solution: Keep it in savings, not stocks
β Using it for non-emergencies
Problem: βVacation is an emergency, right?β
Solution: Have separate sinking funds for planned expenses
β Never using it
Problem: Going into debt to avoid βtouchingβ the emergency fund
Solution: Thatβs what itβs for! Use it, then rebuild.
β Keeping too much in emergency fund
Problem: Missing investment returns on extra cash
Solution: Once you hit 6 months, invest additional savings
β Not adjusting for life changes
Problem: Bought a house but still have $10k fund
Solution: Recalculate when expenses increase
Building Your Emergency Fund
If You Can Save $250/month
| Target | Time to Complete |
|---|---|
| $1,000 starter | 4 months |
| 3 months ($10,500) | 42 months (3.5 years) |
| 6 months ($21,000) | 84 months (7 years) |
If You Can Save $500/month
| Target | Time to Complete |
|---|---|
| $1,000 starter | 2 months |
| 3 months ($10,500) | 21 months (1.75 years) |
| 6 months ($21,000) | 42 months (3.5 years) |
Strategies to Save Faster
π‘ Tax refund: Put entire refund into emergency fund
π‘ Windfalls: Bonuses, gifts, stimulus β emergency fund
π‘ Side hustle: All side income goes to fund initially
π‘ Spending cuts: Find 300/month savings
π‘ Automate: Auto-transfer on payday so you donβt βseeβ it
Real-World Scenarios
Example 1: Job Loss
Situation: Lost job, need 4 months to find new one
Without emergency fund: $16,000 on credit cards at 20% APR
With emergency fund: Use savings, no debt, no stress
Cost difference: 3,200 interest to pay off
Example 2: Medical Emergency
Situation: $5,000 emergency room bill
Without emergency fund: Payment plan at high interest or credit card debt
With emergency fund: Pay in full, negotiate discount for cash payment
Savings: Often 20-30% discount for immediate cash payment
Example 3: Car Repair
Situation: Transmission fails, $3,000 to fix
Without emergency fund: Canβt get to work, might lose job
With emergency fund: Fix immediately, no disruption
Integration with Other Tools
Import from Budget Planner
Click βImport from Budgetβ to automatically populate:
- Monthly essential expenses
- Available surplus for contributions
Inform Debt Payoff Strategy
Your emergency fund status affects debt payoff priority:
- No fund: Build $1,000 before aggressive debt payoff
- $1,000 saved: Split surplus between fund and debt
- Full fund complete: All surplus to debt payoff
The Dave Ramsey Baby Steps
- $1,000 starter emergency fund β Start here
- Pay off all debt (except mortgage) using debt snowball
- 3-6 months full emergency fund β Then this
- Invest 15% for retirement
- Save for kidsβ college
- Pay off mortgage early
- Build wealth and give
FAQ
Q: Should I save for emergencies or pay off debt first?
A: Build $1,000 starter fund, then attack debt, then build full fund.
Q: Is $10,000 enough?
A: Depends on your monthly essential expenses. Use the calculator above.
Q: Can I use my emergency fund for a great investment opportunity?
A: No. Thatβs not an emergency. Keep this money sacred for true emergencies.
Q: Should I count my Roth IRA contributions as emergency fund?
A: No. Early withdrawal has penalties and opportunity cost. Keep separate.
Q: What if I use some of my emergency fund?
A: Pause aggressive debt payoff and rebuild the fund, then resume debt payoff.
Remember: Life will throw emergencies at you. The only question is whether youβll use savings or debt to handle them. Choose savings every time!