Personal Finance
Emergency Fund
Calculator
Monthly essential expenses
Enter only essential costs — the expenses that must be paid regardless of circumstances.
Rent or mortgage payment
Groceries only — not dining out
Car payment, insurance, fuel, or transit
Electric, gas, water, internet, phone
Health, life, renters/homeowners insurance
Minimum debt payments, prescriptions, childcare
3–4 months for stable dual-income households · 6 months is the standard recommendation · 9–12 months for freelancers, single income, or variable pay
What you have set aside today
Your total monthly essentials: $3,200
Emergency fund target
$19,200
$3,200/month × 6 months · $19,200 still needed
Monthly essentials
$3,200
Currently saved
$0
Gap remaining
$19,200
Just getting started
Every dollar you add matters. An emergency fund is the foundation of financial stability — prioritize this before other savings goals.
$0 saved of $19,200 target
How fast can you get there?
$100/month
16y 0m
$200/month
8y 0m
$500/month
3y 3m
How this calculator works
An emergency fund is sized in months of essential expenses — not total income or total spending. The calculator asks you to enter only the costs you genuinely cannot avoid: housing, food, transportation, utilities, insurance, and essential debt payments. Discretionary spending like dining out, entertainment, and subscriptions is excluded because those would be cut first in a real financial emergency.
The target coverage selector lets you choose between 3 and 12 months depending on your situation. The savings plan section shows how long it takes to reach your goal at different monthly saving amounts, and estimates the interest you'd earn if you keep your fund in a high-yield savings account throughout the accumulation period.
Why essentials only
In a job loss or financial crisis, you'd immediately cut non-essential spending. Basing your fund on essential expenses gives you a more accurate — and usually smaller, more achievable — target than using total monthly spending.
Where to keep it
A high-yield savings account is the right home for an emergency fund — FDIC insured, fully liquid, and currently paying 4–5% APY. Avoid CDs (penalty for early withdrawal) or investment accounts (value can drop when you need it most).
How many months
3 months is the minimum for stable dual-income households with job security. 6 months is the standard recommendation. 9–12 months is appropriate for freelancers, single-income households, commission-based workers, or anyone in a volatile industry.
Replenishing after use
After drawing on your emergency fund, treat restoring it as the top financial priority — ahead of extra debt payments or new investments. The fund only works as a safety net if it stays funded.
Why an emergency fund is the foundation of financial health
An emergency fund does something no other financial tool does: it converts financial emergencies into financial inconveniences. A $3,000 car repair or a month of unexpected medical bills is devastating without savings and merely annoying with them. That difference — between an emergency that derails your finances for years and one you handle in an afternoon — is the entire value of the fund.
Without an emergency fund, unexpected expenses go on credit cards. Credit card debt at 20%+ APR compounds quickly, and what started as a $2,000 emergency can take years to pay off and cost double that in interest. The emergency fund breaks that cycle before it starts.
It also removes the pressure to make bad financial decisions under stress. When your car breaks down and you have savings, you can take time to get multiple quotes and choose a good mechanic. When you don't, you take whatever solution is fastest — which is almost never the cheapest. The fund buys you options, and options are worth a lot when you're under pressure.
How to build your emergency fund faster
01
Automate the contribution
Set up an automatic transfer to your HYSA on payday — before you have a chance to spend it. Even $50 or $100 per paycheck builds the habit and the balance simultaneously. Automation removes the decision from your path entirely.
02
Start with a $1,000 mini-fund
If a fully-funded 3–6 month target feels overwhelming, start with $1,000. This covers the most common financial emergencies — a car repair, a medical bill, a broken appliance — and provides meaningful protection while you build toward the full target.
03
Use windfalls deliberately
Tax refunds, work bonuses, and side income are the fastest path to a fully funded emergency fund. Directing even half of an unexpected windfall to your fund can compress a multi-year saving timeline into months.
04
Keep it separate and boring
Your emergency fund should be in a dedicated account you don't see regularly — close enough to access in 1–2 business days, far enough that it doesn't tempt casual spending. A separate HYSA at a different bank from your checking account is the classic setup.
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