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Emergency Cash Funds

How to Prepare With an Emergency Cash Fund

Emergency cash can get you through hard times. To make it work for you, you need to set your fund up properly. This page covers how to manage your emergency cash, how much to have, and ways to think about your emergency savings.

Why Keep Emergency Cash?

By keeping an emergency cash fund, you protect yourself from life’s unknowns. You’ve got a safety net just in case something expensive happens. You might lose your job, incur medical expenses, or have other accounts frozen in error. If any of these things should happen, you’d need money fast. Your emergency cash is there for you.

If you don’t have emergency cash, life can be difficult. You might have to borrow money at unfavorable terms. Then, you’d have a debt burden in addition to the original problem. In addition, you’ll have flexibility, the ability to fix things quickly, and more choices if you’ve got cash on hand.

Appropriate Places for Emergency Cash

Emergency cash needs to be liquid. This means that it’s easily accessible – without cost, delay, risk, or penalty. The best places for emergency cash are savings accounts and money markets. A ladder of short term CD’s might also work, but you’d end up paying penalties if you have to cash out early.

If you can’t think of a good place to keep your emergency cash, look into internet bank accounts. You can get your money from these accounts in a few business days, and some even offer checkbooks and/or debit cards so that you can make a payment instantly.

Too Much Emergency Cash is Costly

Liquidity comes at a cost. The easier it is to get your money, the less you earn on it. As a result, you need to manage your emergency cash. Keep enough on hand – but not too much. If your emergency cash fund grows too big, move some of that money elsewhere.

How Much Emergency Cash Should You Stash?

Look at your expenses to figure out how much your emergency fund should have in it. You’ll want to have between three and nine months’ living expenses available. The level depends on how secure you feel. If you feel very secure (like you won’t lose your job anytime soon, you have great insurance coverage, and you have good luck in general), then you may opt to just keep three months’ worth of expenses on hand.

If saving several months’ worth of expenses is not a possibility for you, consider an emergency cash fund of $1000 or so – just in case.

Which Expenses Should Emergency Cash Cover?

If you look at your monthly budget, you probably have a wide variety of expenses. The important ones for your emergency cash fund are your basic fixed expenses: mortgage, rent, insurance premiums, transportation, food, etc. You don’t need to include the amount you save for your future each month – since you probably won’t save in an emergency anyway (you’ll have bigger fish to fry if you lose your job or suddenly face huge medical expenses). Just keep enough stashed away to provide for your basic needs.

You can find a thorough list of various experts’ recommendations on the exact amount of your emergency fund at the getrichslowly blog. The author there dug into several books and summarizes the information nicely.

After You Spend It

After you use your emergency cash, you’ll need to rebuild the emergency fund as quickly as possible. Remember how nice it was to have some funds on hand, and start on the task of rebuilding those funds. You never know when the next crisis will come up.

Remember, no cheating – don’t use the emergency cash for non-emergencies (like TVs, home improvements, or vacations). You should have separate savings account for those other goals.

By Admin

I grew up in Silicon Valley in the 60's and 70's, took on the tech challenge and has migrated to Seattle in the early 90's. I'm a world traveler, photographer, scuba diver and musician with credits including patent awards. I'm also well known for my abiity to help others as a life coach with my ability to "cut through the #$&*" and get to the problem.

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