How and Why to Start an Emergency Fund
Published on - September 8th, 2006 (Modified on - January 27th, 2012) (by J.D. Roth) “Pay off your debt.” “Max out your IRA.” “Buy a house.” “Get a new job.” Personal finance advisers bombard us with a litany of things we ought to do in order to achieve financial independence. It’s overwhelming. Where’s a person to start?
Most personal finance books agree: the first thing you should do — after meeting basic needs, and while reducing spending — is to start an emergency fund.
What is an emergency fund?
An emergency fund is an easily accessible stash of money for use only in case of emergency. It is not to be used to buy a new car. It is not to be used to buy a new Playstation. It is not to be used to remodel your bathroom. It is for use only in case of emergency.
Why do you need an emergency fund?
Do you really need to ask? Here are some real-life emergencies that have happened recently to people I know:
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- A client’s two children were in a horrible accident Monday night. One died and the other is in intensive care.
- My little brother decided to pack up and move across the state to start a new job.
- A friend’s garage door collapsed.
- My neighbor had a heart attack last week.
- Oregon’s largest private employer just laid off over 10,000 workers.
These are all emergencies of one degree or another. In each case, those people with an emergency fund are going to be in better shape than those without one. Studies show that those without emergency savings are more likely to accumulate debt. It may feel like you can’t afford to have one, but the truth is you can’t afford not to have one. Emergency funds are essential, even for college students.
How much is enough?
Though personal finance experts agree emergency funds are necessary, there’s no consensus on how much is enough. Some say you need save a year’s salary. Others believe $1000 is sufficient. Most advice tends to fall someplace in the middle.
How much do you really need? As usual, I recommend that you do what works for you. There is no one right answer. Examine your situation — your income and your needs — to decide how much you should save. (My wife and I have a $5000 emergency fund, which would pay the mortgage for three months, or all expenses for two months. This seems right for us.)
How do you get started?
Starting an emergency fund can be as simple as depositing $100 into your high interest savings account. But before you begin, be sure that you’re meeting your basic living expenses. And as you build your emergency fund, be sure you’re also reducing your spending and avoiding debt.
I think it’s wise to keep your emergency money someplace that’s not too easy to access. (Ignore this piece of advice if you know you’re disciplined enough not to use the money for other purposes.) You might, for example, open an account at a bank across town. Or deposit the money with an internet bank. Don’t carry a card tied to the account. You’ll still have access to the cash when you need it, but you will be forced to consider your actions before making a withdrawal.
What do the experts say?
I checked the personal finance books on my shelves to find out what the experts had to say.
In The Wealthy Barber [my review], David Chilton writes: “I’m not against emergency funds, but I do feel that $2,000 to $3,000 is much more realistic than $10,000. If you’re afraid that an expensive emergency looms in you future, establish a $10,000 credit line at your bank.” Chilton believes most people have insurance to cover many emergencies, and $2,000 or $3,000 is enough to meet the needs insurance will not cover. In the meantime, if you need more, you can liquidate investments.
Robert Pagliarini, in his forthcoming The Six-Day Financial Makeover, declares that an emergency fund is the most important financial step after taking care of basic living expenses. “Your emergency reserve is your financial cushion in case something goes wrong and you lose your job or you need access to money quickly. Your emergency reserve should consist of at least three months’ worth of cash. Once you’ve saved enough for the cushion, you can [move on] to other goals.”
The Wall Street Journal‘s Complete Personal Finance Guidebook says: “How much is enough? The answer is different for different people in different situations. For those in careers with a large, ongoing demand or who have relatively strong job security, three months’ worth of expenses is probably enough of a cushion. Those with bigger career demands, such as higher-paid managers and executives or couples who work in the same industry or at the same company, might want nine months to a year’s worth of expenses in the bank. Yes, that’s a lot of money to save, but financial security is a game won by the most prepared to outlast the tough times.” Use a money market account for your emergency fund, the book recommends, but keep several hundred dollars in cash someplace safe in your home.
In You Don’t Have to Be Rich, Jean Chatzky recommends three to six months of living expenses. Your Money or Your Life recommends six months of living expenses, but only once you’ve achieved financial independence.
In The Automatic Millionaire, David Bach recommends the following three steps:
- Decide how big a cushion you need. Bach recommends three months of living expenses, though he believes more is better.
- Don’t touch it. “The reason most people don’t have any emergency money in the bank is that they have what they think is an emergency every month…A real emergency is something that threatens your survival, not just your desire to be comfortable.”
- Put it in the right place. “Not earning interest on your emergency money is almost as bad as burying it in your backyard.”
I like the approach espoused in Dave Ramsey’s The Total Money Makeover. Ramsey’s very first step is to save $1000 in an emergency fund. Then he advocates eliminating debt via the snowball method. Only once your debt has been eliminated does he recommend building a three- to six-month cushion. This is excellent advice.
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One of the major things I’ve realized is making sure I have an emergency fund for those situations that you don’t expect. If you have an emergency fund and something unexpted happens it won’t derail your savings goals. ING Direct offers a way to split your account into “defined” segments. I have “emergency” “down payment” “savings 1″ and “vacation” I can allocate how much each section get whenever I want. If you want a referral link to get a $25 kickstart (only if you begin with at least $250) that is automatically deposited to your account, shoot me an e-mail at z3trkrnr@ gmail.com
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This is a general comment: I love your blog and I very much enjoy the slow and steady approach to money.
As for my story: I was looking over my finances and was a bit dismayed that my net worth hadn’t budged since last year. But later, I realized that:
1) I was laid off and not working for 5 months
2) I’d taken three long and fun vacations in my time off and connected with friends and family
and 3) I bought a car (taking on debt)
Overall, I should be proud because I had fun with my time off, my net worth is a lot higher than average, and being laid off was an “emergency” and hopefully a rare situation. In general, I usually save more, but having one “off” year is OK given what I chose to do in that time.
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The rule of thumb I’m trying to meet is to have 1/3rd of my gross annual salary saved as an emergency fund. That should sustain me for an entire year with no external income. Not quite there yet, but with the economy on the rocks and my job security uncertain, I’m trying to reach that goal by year’s end.
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For my situation, I think 3 months of take home pay should be enough. If things go way bad, I can cut expenses to make it last.
I am surprised nobody has mentioned iBonds. That is where I have my rainy day fund. They are guaranteed to beat inflation and have the backing of the US Federal Government. On the downside, once you buy a iBond, you have to wait one year before you can withdraw. After that, you can withdraw at any time.
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I agree that an emergency fund is vital, esp. in this volatile economy. However, seeing that the economy will get worse, not better, I think it is better to cut back on your payments to your credit card by say $50 a month and sock that money away in an account. While you may be paying off your credit card bills for a few years, within a 12 month span, you’ll be at least $600 closer to your $1000 earmark.
I started my emergency fund in college and now my surplus goes towards saving for a house and retirement.
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I just wrote a complete FAQ on the subject of emergency funds. You can find it here: http://www.btgnow.net/2008/09/btg-explains-what-is-an-emergency-fund/
It has all the information about what an emergency fund is, how to start one, conventional thinking about how much should be in there and much more.
I like that you included different PF author’s views on the subject of emergency funds though. I am intrigued by Chilton’s idea of taking out a line of credit, but I’m gonna stick with Bach on this one: a loan is a loan, you’d have to pay it back someday, whereas a larger emergency fund is your money, free and clear.
Great post!
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When Murphy comes to visit it generally has played havoc and created spiraling debt. I’m dedicating myself to build a $20K emergency fund.
Including four to six months of living expenses, it will also gives me $10K for my high deductible health insurance. Basic medicine and doctors visits eat up the health Saving Account contributions.
Even though I have consistently contributed to my company retirement plan, any plans for Roth/Traditional IRA contributions seemed to get always get derailed for major purchases, emergency room visits, etc…
If not a first priority, I would make it a top three. 1) Zero credit card debt 2) retirement Savings 3) Emergency fund.
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It’s all about risk.
It’s my own approach, but maybe some will find it insightful:
Imagine the worst-case scenario: you’ve injured yourself while crashing your car into your house, and the house burned down to the ground. You survive and slowly recover in about 1 year.
First, you need insurance: life, health, car, homeowners’ (if possible, short- and long-term disability too)
Add up deductibles on all your insurances. That’s the amount you need for your emergency fund.
Second, you need safety-cushion fund. One year of your basic expenses (12 x monthly basic expenses). You know how to calculate this one, right?
Third, protect your funds against inflation risk. Because you add interest from CD or saving account to your income, it’s taxed at your maximal tax rate (25% if you make $50K a year). So, build your funds in a Roth IRA. You can withdraw your contributions from Roth IRA at any time without any penalties and taxes. You’ll even have 60 days to put it back. You only can’t withdraw gains until you’re 59 years old.
If you save at 25% rate a year (after tax), you’ll build your safety cushion in 3 years (because that means you spend 75% after-tax, and 75/25=3). It will take you at least 4 years to build both funds.
Once you built your funds, you’ll be financially protected against all kind of risks.
Another way to build the safety-cushion and emergency funds is to start contributing to your 401k. Put everything into safest investment vehicle – money market fund, and let it grow untaxed. While emergency time comes, in effect you will probably be out of work, out of income, and most probably you’ll fall into lower tax bracket in that year. You would withdraw some funds from your 401k and pay 10% penalty and taxes. But because you fall into lower tax bracket you’ll save on taxes more than that 10% penalty. And that even not taking into account any employers match. If you try to calculate it yourself, then also remember about unpaid taxes while you were contributing to 401k.
In general this situation applies to singles making $40K-$100K or more and falling into high 20-30% tax bracket.
This may also be a way of life for young singles. Work for 2-3 years contributing as much as possible to 401k. This would require making at least $50K per year. Then take a year long vacation, and live frugally from that savings without work. For example, kitesurfing in Belize or Mexico for a whole year.
This is an extreme example of hacking 401k but such person would end up much better than a person saving after-tax money in saving account for such vacation.
Anyway, only once you get your funds built you may start saving to buy a house, or start investing in stocks and index funds.
Happy saving!
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I have about 3 months set aside and I have them all in I Bonds. The only draw back of I bonds is that they can’t be touched for a year and if you cash them before five years you lose 3 months of interest. I view an emergency fund as a place to park money in case of a real emergency and not to get rich. I am currently trying to pay off my house, but my security gland want’s to build 6 months of an emergency fund in this market.
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I am all for saving but 25% of your income as Biker suggests above is WAY outside the norm. I don’t believe anyone can do it, except maybe for a rather short period of time after landing a new job or getting a promotion (let’s leave business owners and self-employed for another story). You see, you do not leave in a vacuum and all the prices you pay, especially on big ticket items tend to go right up to where you can JUST afford it. If everyone around you were saving 25% of their earnings, I bet you would leave in the same house yet it would cost you only 75% of what it is now. The builder would not be able to charge what they do if they did not know that people would be willing to spend everything they got and then some to get the house. So, again, since you are not leaving in a desert, your efforts to build a 25% cushion will be beaten down at every corner, most especially if you buy that big ticket item like a house or a car.
It is also hard to see how an emergency fund could be untouchable even if the family slides into something like foreclosure – not an immediate catastrophic event like a car crash but similarly unpleasant nevertheless.
It would seem like if you did not try to save this much, your real quality of life will increase in very real and not hypothetical (in case of emergency) terms.
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A lot of my friends, average joes and jills, ask me how much they should put in their emergency fund. I tell them “enough to retire on, or 30% of your income, whichever is more.”
To explain, an emergency fund should be constantly growing, and as fast as possible since you never know when it’ll be used. Of course, it’s ok to use in an emergency, that is the whole point, but it really should be a long term thing. Perhaps my words are over the top for many people, but again the key point here is “long term.”
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I strongly agree putting up at least $1000 that is after taking care of the basic living family needs, when that happens, its an advantage to go on. For me, its simply getting rid first on extra expenditures that does not concern growth on the level of income, and instead look for safe investment on stocks or bonds. It could be easier to increase allotment for emergency fund when you have already eliminated expenses on your list and start increasing to $1500 then later to higher amount.
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I have somewhat different take on emergency fund, which I believe to be counter productive for people struggling with debt. Here is why http://www.mewithoutdebt.com/2009/11/feeling-broke-is-good.html
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Thank God for my E-Fund! I have been saving diligently but am not that far along-about 2 months mortgage payments in cash. However I was burgled on the 13th-quite badly burgled-and the fund was a life saver. I had to have some work done on the house and an alarm system installed plus other odds and ends-I charged it all-and paid the charges off before they even hit my statement because the Fund covered it. I still have half the fund and will start rebuilding it right away and keep on with my original plan-9-12 months mortgage payments in cash. Being burgled was awful-it will take me a long time to recover-but w/o the fund it would have been much worse. Now, I feel pretty ok and am still debt free!
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Just thought I’d mention an alternative to using a high interest savings account – I keep my emergency fund in a mortgage offset account. This means I’m reducing the amount of interest I pay on my home loan each month, and I’m better off as the interest rate on my loan is higher than I could get in a saving account. Also, I’m not paying tax on interest earned on savings.
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I would like to know just “who” are these “experts” to determine “how much is enough” to pull one through an emergency. My husband and I had 6 months of savings for just such an emergency such as job loss, a medical issue, accident, etc. When he lost his job in 2008 we weren’t too concerned because we had done everything right. We didn’t live rich because we’re not, but we weren’t poor either. We had our savings for 6 months of expenses and mortgage as “experts” indicated we would need to pull us through, but after that 6 months was gone….so was our emergency fund and any hope for him to find another job locally. So, we did everything right…..but experts are not really experts unless they themselves are in the situation currently. Today’s emergencies are different than I remember seeing them to be in my younger years. Today, U.S. families are less likely to take one another in and care for each other. Or the typical responsible U.S. family doesn’t want to feel like a “burden” on other family members. Our government (national and local) has so many hoops for a homeless person to jump through to make themselves feel safe, being fed at all much less healthy foods, or feel that they can make much progress in becoming self-sufficient without the penalties imposed or fear of penalties being imposed, and the stigma that goes with being homeless, it’s no wonder that these people choose to live in a tent down near the river close to resources that they can take advantage of in the city. The face of today’s homeless has indeed changed and become much, much younger than the “hobos’ I met riding the rail cars when I was young….and that was just as recent as the mid-70′s, not that awful long ago. Citizens of the 21st Century in all their “progress” do not want to be bothered with the responsibility of taking care of their neighbor because it just takes too much time, money and resources to “fix” the homelessness and joblessness that has ripped our communities apart or it’s someone else’s problem. The homeless are not just the mentally ill, the substance abused persons or even the lazy person we once believed them all to be. No ~ they’re not, they are our neighbors, our family, they are you and I; just one step away from being in that tent and loosing our job because we no longer have a permanent address or loosing our permanent home because we’ve lost our jobs. If you want to consult an expert…..talk to a homeless person. They are more than happy for just one person, to take enough of an interest to ask them their thoughts on what is enough.
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We are shooting for having one year of averaged expenses kept in an emergency fund.
The fund will all be in I-Bonds that are over a year old; all purchased through Treasury Direct to avoid any broker fees. That way, they will never lose value due to inflation, the principle is always secure and we will be able to convert it to cash in a day or two (they are all over one year old).
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