Building an Emergency Savings Fund

The first account that you need to fund is your Emergency Savings.  Your emergency savings (which can live happily in your savings account) holds enough cash to allow you to weather any temporary financial downturns - an accident that keeps you from working, losing or changing jobs, replacing the brake pads and rotors on your car - without resulting in late payments and a trashed credit score.  Having an emergency savings account offers tremendous peace of mind and confidence to a twentysomething.  Fund your emergency savings, and chances are good that you will be in better financial shape than your parents were at your age. 

How much should you hold in your emergency savings?  As much as you need to feel comfortable.  Many experts recommend 3-6 months worth of living expenses.  If you can amass that kind of savings, definitely go for it.  You can use these planning tools to determine how long and/or how much you will have to save to reach a certain goal.  I would much rather that you saved something rather than being intimidated by a large figure and saving nothing.  For now, saving one month’s worth of living expenses is a great start.

For many twentysomethings, saving as little as $100 each month for a year or two will result in an emergency savings account that will easily cover 1-2 months expenses.  Again, if you can comfortably save more, do so.  Begin with 10% of your monthly earnings, which is a fairly comfortable savings target.  As your emergency savings account is very liquid, you can easily move excess savings into retirement accounts or apply them towards other goals later. 

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This entry was posted on Thursday, September 21st, 2006 at 10:00 am and is filed under "The Plan", Saving. You may e-mail this post to a friend. You may print this page. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


 

One Response to “Building an Emergency Savings Fund”

  1. Quarterlife Finance » Blog Archive » Don’t buy a house you cannot afford Says:

    […] Ask questions of your mortgage broker.  Don’t sign anything without knowing what it means.  Most brokers are honest, depending on referral business, and cannot afford to scam you.  If you can put down even 5% of the purchase price, you’ll benefit significantly.  Your best option is to keep your credit score high, put down 5-20% on the purchase, and keep a healthy emergency savings account to help you through any financial difficulties. […]

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