How Much Should You Have In An Emergency Fund?
Establishing an emergency fund is an important step in achieving financial stability and growth. Not only does it help protect you when big expenses arise or when a spouse loses a job but it also helps keep your other financial goals on track.
Establishing an emergency fund is an important step in achieving financial stability and growth. Not only does it help protect you when big expenses arise or when a spouse loses a job but it also helps keep your other financial goals on track. When we educate clients on emergency funds, the follow questions typically arise:
How much should you have in an emergency fund?
Does the amount vary if you are retired versus still working?
Should your emergency fund be held in a savings account or invested?
When is your emergency fund too large?
How do you coordinate this with your other financial goals?
Emergency Fund Amount
In general, your emergency fund should typically be 4 to 6 months of your total monthly expenses. To calculate this, you will have to complete a monthly budget listing all of your expenses. Here is a link to an excel spreadsheet that we provide to our clients to assist them with this budgeting exercise: GFG Expense Planner.
Big unforeseen expenses come in all shapes and sizes but frequently include:
You or your spouse lose a job
Medical expenses
Unexpected tax bill
Household expenses (storm, flooding, roof, furnace, fire)
Major car expenses
Increase in childcare expenses
Family member has an emergency and needs financial support
Without a cash reserve, surprise financial events like these can set you back a year, 5 years, 10 years, or worse, force you into bankruptcy, require you to move, or to sell your house. Having the discipline to establish an emergency fund will help to insulate you and your family from these unfortunate events.
Cash Is King
We usually advise clients to keep their emergency fund in a savings account that is liquid and readily available. That will usually prompt the question: “But my savings account is earning minimal interest, isn’t it a waste to have that much sitting in cash earning nothing?” The purpose of the emergency fund it to be able write a check on the spot in the event of a financial emergency. If your emergency fund is invested in the stock market and the stock market drops by 20%, it may be an inopportune time to liquidate that investment, or your emergency fund amount may no longer be the adequate amount.
Even though that cash is just sitting in your savings account earning little to no interest, it prevents you from having to go into debt, take a 401(k) loan, or liquidate investments at an inopportune time to meet the unforeseen expense.
Cash Reserve When You Retire
I will receive the question from retirees: “Should your cash reserve be larger once you are retired because you are no longer receiving a paycheck?” In general, my answer is “no”, as long as you have your 4 months of living expenses in cash, that should be sufficient. I will explain why in the next section.
Your Cash Reserve Is Too Large
There is such a thing as having too much cash. Cash can provide financial security but beyond that, holding cash does not provide a lot of financial benefits. If 4 months of your living expenses is $20,000 and you are holding $100,000 in cash in your savings account, whether you are retired or not, that additional $80,000 in cash over and above your emergency fund amount could probably be working harder for you doing something else. There is a long list of options, but it could include:
Paying down debt (including the mortgage)
Making contributions to retirement accounts to lower your income tax liability
Roth conversions
College savings accounts for your kids or grandchildren\
Gifting strategies
Investing the money in an effort to hedge inflation and receive a higher long-term return
Emergency Fund & Other Financial Goals
It’s not uncommon for individuals and families to find it difficult to accumulate 4 months worth of savings when they have so many other bills. If you are living paycheck to paycheck right now and you have debt such as credit cards or student loans, you may first have to focus on a plan for paying down your debt to increase the amount of extra money you have left over to begin working toward your emergency fund goal. If you find yourself in this situation, a great book to read is “The Total Money Makeover” by Dave Ramsey.
The probability of achieving your various financial goals in life increases dramatically once you have an emergency fund in place. If you plan to retire at a certain age, pay for your children to go college, be mortgage and debt free, purchase a second house, whatever the goal may be, large unexpected expenses can either derail those financial goals completely, or set you back years from achieving them.
Remember, life is full of surprises and usually those surprises end up costing you money. Having that emergency fund in place allows you to handle those surprise expenses without causing stress or jeopardizing your financial future.
About Michael……...
Hi, I’m Michael Ruger. I’m the managing partner of Greenbush Financial Group and the creator of the nationally recognized Money Smart Board blog . I created the blog because there are a lot of events in life that require important financial decisions. The goal is to help our readers avoid big financial missteps, discover financial solutions that they were not aware of, and to optimize their financial future.