Emergency Fund Calculator
An emergency fund calculator estimates how much cash reserve may cover a selected number of months of essential expenses. It also shows the remaining gap and a monthly savings amount for a chosen timeline.
Quick answer
A common emergency-fund target is three to six months of essential expenses, but the right amount depends on job stability, household income sources, insurance, health needs, and access to support.
Calculator
How to use this calculator
- Estimate essential monthly expenses.
- Choose how many months of coverage you want.
- Enter current emergency savings.
- Choose a timeline for filling the gap.
- Review the target, gap, and monthly savings plan.
Explanation
What it is
An emergency fund calculator estimates how much cash reserve may cover a selected number of months of essential expenses. It also shows the remaining gap and a monthly savings amount for a chosen timeline.
How it works
The target equals essential monthly expenses multiplied by the selected months of coverage. The gap is the target minus current emergency savings, and the monthly plan divides the gap by the chosen funding period.
When to use it
Use this calculator to compare realistic scenarios before making a financial decision, and update the inputs when rates, costs, income, or goals change.
Limitations
- The result is an estimate based only on the inputs and assumptions shown.
- It does not evaluate eligibility, product terms, market conditions, or personal legal and tax circumstances.
- Actual outcomes can differ because of fees, timing, rounding, taxes, and provider-specific methods.
Key terms
- Emergency fund
- Cash reserved for unexpected essential expenses or income loss.
- Essential expense
- A cost that is difficult to pause without serious consequences.
- Coverage period
- The number of months the reserve is intended to support.
- Liquidity
- How quickly an asset can be accessed without a major loss.
- Savings gap
- The amount still needed to reach the target.
Formula
The target equals essential monthly expenses multiplied by the selected months of coverage. The gap is the target minus current emergency savings, and the monthly plan divides the gap by the chosen funding period.
Worked example
If essential expenses are $4,000 per month and the target is six months, the reserve goal is $24,000. Existing savings reduce the remaining gap.
FAQ
How much should I have in an emergency fund?
Three to six months of essential expenses is a common starting range. A larger fund may be appropriate for variable income, one-income households, health risks, or specialized careers.
What expenses should I include?
Include housing, basic food, utilities, insurance, essential transport, minimum debt payments, medication, childcare needed for work, and other costs you could not safely pause.
Should I invest my emergency fund?
Emergency money usually prioritizes safety and access over maximum return. Volatile investments can fall when the money is needed.
Can a credit card replace an emergency fund?
Credit can provide temporary liquidity, but it can be reduced or expensive and creates debt. Cash reserves avoid relying entirely on borrowing during a crisis.
Should I save for emergencies before paying debt?
Many people build a small starter reserve first, then balance high-interest debt payoff with further savings. The best order depends on rates, income stability, and immediate risks.
Where should I keep emergency savings?
Common options include an insured savings account or money market deposit account with convenient access, no market risk, and limited fees.
Common mistakes
- Including discretionary spending as essential.
- Keeping the entire reserve in volatile investments.
- Using credit limits as a cash reserve.
- Setting a target without a funding plan.
Tips
- Base the target on essential expenses.
- Keep the reserve liquid and accessible.
- Use automatic transfers to fill the gap.
- Revisit the target after income or household changes.
Sources and editorial review
Educational estimates only; not personalized financial, tax, legal, lending, investment, or insurance advice.