Tool 25 of 30  ·  Risk

No emergency fund? One setback costs you thousands.

Enter an emergency scenario. See CC interest, payoff delay, and the real wealth cost of being unprepared.

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True Cost of Having No Emergency Fund
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True cost of no e-fund

How Much Should Your Emergency Fund Be?

The standard advice — save 3–6 months of expenses — is a starting point, not a precise answer. The right emergency fund size depends on your job security, number of income earners in your household, fixed obligations, and how quickly you could replace your income if needed. This calculator personalises the target based on your actual risk profile.

Being underfunded on your emergency fund is expensive in ways that aren't immediately obvious. Without adequate reserves, a single unexpected expense forces high-cost debt (credit cards at 20%+ APR, personal loans) or early investment account withdrawals that trigger taxes and penalties. The true cost of an undersized emergency fund is the interest and penalties paid when life inevitably throws a surprise.

The 3–6 Month Rule: Who Should Be at Each End

3 months is appropriate if: You have a stable government or tenured job, a second household income, highly marketable skills with short expected unemployment duration, and minimal fixed obligations (no dependents, low fixed debt).

6+ months is appropriate if: You're self-employed or freelance, work in a cyclical industry, have a single household income, high fixed obligations (mortgage, dependents), or work in a specialised field with longer typical job searches.

Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund

Your emergency fund should be in a high-yield savings account (HYSA) — not invested in the market, not in a chequing account earning 0.01%. Current HYSA rates of 4–5% mean a $20,000 emergency fund earns $800–$1,000/year in interest while remaining instantly accessible. The money should be liquid and stable — its job is not to grow aggressively, but to be there when you need it without losing value.

Common Questions

How many months of expenses should I have in emergency fund?
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3 months if: stable employment, two household incomes, highly marketable skills. 6 months if: single income, self-employed, specialised field, high fixed obligations (mortgage, dependents). 9–12 months if: business owner, highly volatile income, or in an industry prone to long job searches.
Should emergency fund be invested in stocks?
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No. Your emergency fund should be in cash or a high-yield savings account. Stocks can drop 30–50% right when you need the money most — during a recession that also causes job losses. Liquidity and stability are the requirements, not growth.
What is the true cost of not having an emergency fund?
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Without adequate reserves, unexpected expenses force credit card debt (20%+ APR), personal loans, or early retirement account withdrawals (10% penalty + taxes). A $5,000 emergency funded by credit card debt at 22% APR takes years to pay off and costs thousands in interest.
Where should I keep my emergency fund?
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A high-yield savings account (HYSA) offering 4–5% APY is the optimal location. It's FDIC/CDIC insured, instantly accessible, and earns meaningful interest. Avoid: chequing accounts (0.01% interest), money market funds (not FDIC insured in all cases), or any invested accounts.
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Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Projections use historical averages and are not guaranteed. Consult a qualified financial advisor.