Emergency Fund Calculator

How much do you need for emergencies?

Calculate Your Emergency Fund

Rent/mortgage, utilities, insurance

Car payment, gas, insurance, public transit

Insurance premiums, medications

Subscriptions, entertainment, etc.

How much you already have saved

What Is an Emergency Fund?

An emergency fund is money set aside for unexpected expenses or financial emergencies. It's your financial safety net — protection against job loss, medical emergencies, car repairs, or any surprise expense that could derail your finances.

💡 The Golden Rule: Most experts recommend saving 3-6 months of expenses. If your job is unstable or you're the sole earner, aim for 6-12 months.

Why You Need an Emergency Fund

Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund

✓ Good Options

  • High-yield savings account (4-5% APY)
  • Money market account
  • Separate bank account (out of sight)

✗ Bad Options

  • Checking account (too accessible)
  • Stocks/investments (too volatile)
  • Cash under mattress (inflation + theft risk)

How to Build Your Emergency Fund

  1. Start small: Aim for $1,000 first — that covers most emergencies
  2. Automate: Set up automatic transfers on payday
  3. Use windfalls: Tax refunds, bonuses, gifts go straight to savings
  4. Cut one expense: Skip one subscription and save that amount
  5. Increase gradually: Once you hit $1,000, keep going

Emergency Fund vs. Other Savings

Type Purpose Amount
Emergency Fund Unexpected expenses 3-6 months expenses
Retirement Long-term future 10-15% of income
Savings Goals Vacations, cars, etc. Varies by goal
Investments Wealth building After emergency fund

Priority Order: 1) Build $1,000 starter emergency fund → 2) Pay off high-interest debt → 3) Complete 3-6 month emergency fund → 4) Invest for retirement

When to Use Your Emergency Fund

Use it for:

Don't use it for:

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast should I build my emergency fund?

Start with $1,000 as fast as possible (1-3 months). Then aim to reach 3-6 months within 1-2 years. Prioritize this over investing until you have the basics covered.

Should I invest my emergency fund?

No. Keep it in a high-yield savings account. You need quick access and zero volatility. Investments can drop 30% in a month — exactly when you might need the money.

What if I have debt?

Build a $1,000 starter fund first. Then pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans). Then finish your emergency fund. Low-interest debt (mortgage, student loans) can wait.

Can I use my credit card as an emergency fund?

This is risky. Credit cards charge 18-25% interest. A $5,000 emergency on a credit card could cost $10,000+ in interest. Build real savings instead.

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