Before investing, before chasing returns, before almost anything, there's one move that quietly removes a huge amount of stress from your life: an emergency fund. It's a stash of cash that stands between you and a bad month — a job loss, a car repair, a medical bill — so a surprise expense doesn't become a debt spiral.
How much should you save?
The classic guideline is three to six months of essential expenses — rent, food, utilities, transport, minimums. Notice that's based on your expenses, not your income. If your job is unstable or you're self-employed, lean toward six months or more. If you have very stable income and a safety net, three months may be enough to start.
Start with a starter fund
Six months sounds intimidating from zero, so don't start there. Aim first for a small starter fund — say, one month of expenses, or even a round number that feels safe. That first milestone removes the most common emergencies and builds momentum. You can grow it from there.
Where should you keep it?
An emergency fund has one job: be there, in full, the instant you need it. That means it should be safe and liquid — easy to access without losing value. A separate high-yield savings account is ideal: it's not your everyday checking (so you won't spend it), but you can reach it within a day. Don't invest your emergency fund in the stock market — the whole point is that it can't drop in value the week you need it.
How to actually build it
The reliable way is to make it automatic. Set up a recurring transfer on payday into that separate account, even if it's small, and treat it like a bill. Funnel windfalls — a bonus, a tax refund, a gift — straight into it to jump ahead. The habit matters more than the amount.
Want to see how fast you'll get there? Plug your target into the Savings Goal calculator and watch the date appear. And if saving consistently is hard for you, it might be your money personality — find yours with the Money Personality quiz to learn the approach that fits you.
When to use it (and refill it)
Use it for genuine emergencies — not a sale, not a vacation. And when you do dip in, make refilling it your next priority. An emergency fund isn't a one-time achievement; it's a buffer you keep topped up. Once it's solid, you've earned the freedom to take smart risks everywhere else.
This guide is general education, not personalized financial advice.