Get your personalized emergency fund target based on your actual expenses.
An emergency fund is a dedicated cash reserve held in a liquid, accessible account — not invested, not earmarked for anything, just sitting ready. Its sole purpose is to absorb financial shocks without forcing you to take on debt, liquidate investments at the wrong time, or make desperate decisions. Financial advisors near-universally consider it the first priority in any financial plan — before investing, before aggressive debt payoff, before anything.
The reason is simple: life is unpredictable. A car repair, a medical bill, a job loss, a broken appliance — any of these can happen at any time, and without a cash cushion, even people with otherwise strong finances can find themselves putting emergencies on a credit card at 20%+ interest. An emergency fund converts financial fragility into financial stability.
The conventional wisdom is 3–6 months of essential living expenses. But 'expenses' in this context means your bare-bones survival budget — rent or mortgage, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments. Not dining out, not subscriptions, not entertainment. The question is: if your income stopped tomorrow, what would you need to keep a roof over your head and food on the table?
The right target depends on your personal risk profile. A government employee with 20 years of tenure and a defined-benefit pension has very different job security than a freelancer with three clients. A single-income household needs more cushion than a dual-income couple where both partners have stable jobs.
3 months of essential expenses is a reasonable minimum. You have some job security, a clear path back to employment if needed, and likely other safety nets.
6 months is the right target. Irregular income means your emergency fund may need to bridge longer gaps, and you may not have unemployment insurance to fall back on.
Aim for 6–9 months. One job loss completely eliminates household income. The fund needs to carry the whole family, not just supplement one partner's earnings.
Consider 9–12 months. Medical expenses, special needs, and the additional complexity of dependent care can extend both the cost and duration of financial emergencies.
6+ months. Finding a new position in a niche field or a down market can take longer than average.
The emergency fund has two competing requirements: it must be safe (no risk of loss) and it must be accessible quickly. That rules out the stock market (too volatile, may be down exactly when you need it), CDs with penalties for early withdrawal, and physical cash under a mattress. The right vehicle is a high-yield savings account (HYSA) at an online bank.
HYSAs currently pay 4–5% APY — far above the 0.01–0.5% offered by traditional bank savings accounts. Your money is FDIC-insured up to $250,000, and transfers to your checking account typically take 1–3 business days (some institutions offer same-day). Keep it at a different institution than your checking account — just enough friction to prevent impulse withdrawals, but accessible within a business day when you actually need it.