“How much cash do you carry in your wallet?” my friend Michael asked at lunch last Sunday.
“I don’t know,” I said. “Somewhere between $40 and $100, I guess. That’s how much I take out of the ATM when I need it. Why do you ask?”
“Well, I read something the other day that said the average person keeps about $175 on hand. That seems like a lot.”
“That does seem like a lot,” Kris said. “I don’t keep much in my purse at all.”
“Some people do carry a lot of cash,” I said. “I know people who not only keep a lot in their wallet, but have stashes hidden around their house.”
Michael nodded. “When my mother died, we found $1500 tucked in various places around her place,” he said. “She didn’t have much money — she was on food stamps — yet she had all this cash hidden in her house.”
“Maybe it was her way of feeling wealthy,” suggested Michael’s wife, Laura.
“We’ve never kept cash around the house,” Kris said, “but now the economy makes me nervous. Maybe it’s irrational, but now I feel like I’d like to have some on hand. Just in case.”
“My father was a worrier,” I said. “Back in the 1980s, he was always worried about some looming economic disaster. He didn’t have much money, either, but somehow he found a way to hoard a few ounces of gold and silver. But he didn’t like having it in the house. He was afraid it might be stolen. Instead, he created a ‘safe’ out of a short length of pipe and two caps.”

“It looks like a pipe bomb!” Kris said.
“It kind of does,” I agreed. “When we were cleaning mom’s house recently, I found Dad’s old pipe safe. It was in the pantry, behind the canned food, which was the same place he always kept it. He hid it in plain sight.”
“At first I thought there might still be some gold or silver in it,” I said wistfully, “but there was only a handful of dead spiders.”
“I wonder what’s normal,” Laura said. “I wonder if most people keep money around the house.”
“I don’t know,” I said, “but now I’m curious. I’ll see what I can find out.”
Later that evening, I spent Too Much Time searching the internet and digging through personal finance books, looking for some facts on this subject. Finally, in a book called Are You Normal About Money?, I found the following stats:
- 96% of women carry a purse or a wallet.
- 61% of men carry a wallet, while 6% use a money clip, and about 20% carry cash loose in pockets.
- The average purse or wallet contains about $104.
- 13% of American adults use a piggy bank, while 28% collect change in a jar.
- Just over 15% of Americans keep a serious stash of cash around the house — about half of these hide it, while the other half keeps it someplace obvious.
- Another third of the population keeps a small amount of cash on hand for emergencies.
- More than half of us don’t keep any extra cash in the house at all.
I know this is kind of an awkward thing to ask, but I’m curious if you folks keep money stashed around your house in case of emergency. How do you decide how much to carry in your purse or wallet? Have recent bank woes affected your habits? How much cash do you keep on hand?
This article is about Ask the Readers, Odds and Ends
SEARCH FOR RECENT ARTICLES




I usually only keep $20-$80 in my wallet although I have friend who do “Law Of Attraction” work and they carry a spare $100-$300 to “raise their vibration” and attract more wealth. I will keep trying that.
I have the goal to keep another $100-$500 at the house for a national emergency like the banks shutting down. Good thing they are “Too Big To Fail”.
loading....
Followed the link from today’s emailed article! A good topic. I have a secret $100 in my purse on top of my usual monthly spending money. At home, I keep $1,000 divided into smaller ammounts in the firebox, and wow has that come in handy over the last two years. For 7 years we didn’t have to touch it, then Hurricane Ike came through and for a week and a half, we had no power. Stores had no power, banks had no power, so you could only use cash, no credit. We ended up evacuating after the third day, but that entire day, couldn’t find any place that took credit, so I was grateful for the emergency cash stash we had. The second time was when our furnace died, on a holiday weekend, and the only way to get it fixed was for my husband to do it himself, and the parts place only took cash… $400 of it.
It always hurts a little to repay the emergency cash stash, but that’s why we never use it except in a real emergency, like having to evacuate due to a hurricane, or the furace going out, with a new baby and it being 40 degrees inside the house.
loading....
Saw the short pipes in the picture embedded in the original post and it reminded me of a story a co-worker told about when he used to work for a guy who bought old properties and turned them into rental units. He usually bought old 3-flats typical of the older Chicago neighborhoods. They were working in the basement of one for several weeks–stepping over and kicking around a bunch short pipes with capped ends. One day the new property owner took one of the pipes home and wrenched off the capped end. The pipe was filled with tight rolls of cash. All the other pipes were filled with cash as well which totaled $17,000!!! Even more incredible, they determined the money to have been the life savings of an old man who ran a barbershop upstairs that was in business back in the 40′s and 50′s.
I’ll let someone else do the math, but imagine what kind of compounded return he could have gotten for his estate on 17 grand over 60 years? Either way, he had too much cash on hand.
loading....
My significant other and I have a “Monies Jar” where we put spare change and cash when available. We recently used the money when we bought a house for things that we needed FAST but didn’t budget for (such as garden tools, a ladder, a lawn mower, etc.)
In addition, I have always (since grade school) stashed cash in the house. Up until a year or two ago it was a ridiculous amount. Since then I realized I should probably not be so paranoid and that my stashed money will do more work for me in a high interest-bearing account.
I now keep a $1000 cash emergency fund hidden (but easily accessible) in the house… but if needed I can access enough money in less than 3 business days to fly us anywhere in the world without borrowing.
loading....
Reading the comments amazed me!
I rarely have more than $5-10 in my wallet and my wife usually has little more than that.
At home, we usually have $20-30 for babysitters, but we put all of our loose change in a container for charity. My 2 year old loves to put money he finds (paper and coin) into it.
I know my in-laws each carry a few hundred regularly, which I don’t even do when I travel internationally.
loading....
I rarely have cash in my wallet. Right now I have $25 but normally it’s nothing! I like to track all my purchases in mint so I prefer to use my debit card for everything (I know you can now assign ATM withdrawals to different categories, but I don’t want the extra work). For the most part I have never been “stuck” because I don’t have cash, but at times I wonder if I’m making a mistake by not having some on hand.
Same with keeping cash at home. I have a bowl of quarters, that’s it. I have been thinking that I should keep at least $100 stashed somewhere.
loading....
I can’t believe how little money people keep at home. $20 bucks for laundry? Are you serious? $500 for a national emergency? That’s about 2 days hotel where in live in good times.
I think everyone needs to realize that $100 isn’t a lot of money anymore. And keeping $2500 at home is not a big deal. If you think this is a lot of money, maybe you should consider selling the BMW, getting rid of the cable, or moving to a place you can afford.
And don’t pretend you are some big investor who is going to get great returns on your $2500. If you are a serious investor then you will have a portion of your funds in short term securities, some of that money can be in cash. (The 1% you don’t get from the bank amounts to $25 year.)
loading....
@Sean
I too find it hard to believe how unprepared many GRS readers seem to be for emergencies. We had a tornado go through our area the night before last. Power is still out in places and trees need to be cut up and hauled away. I don’t have a surplus to help those familes in my area who were not prepared. Hopefully someone else will?
loading....
Have about 500-700 in the coin jar.
loading....