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Emergency Fund Calculator

Calculate how much emergency fund you need based on monthly expenses, dependents, and employment type.

₹10K₹2L
06
₹0₹20L

Where to Keep Emergency Fund

  • • 50% - Savings Account (instant access)
  • • 30% - Liquid Mutual Funds (1-2 days)
  • • 20% - Short-term FD (premature withdrawal)

Emergency Fund Plan

Recommended Emergency Fund

400,000

8 months of expenses

Current Progress:

25.0%
Existing Savings100,000
Shortfall300,000
Monthly Savings Needed (1 year)25,000

Action Plan:

  • 1. Set up auto-transfer to savings account
  • 2. Cut unnecessary expenses temporarily
  • 3. Use bonuses/windfalls to build fund
  • 4. Don't invest until fund is complete

⚠️ Priority #1: Build emergency fund before investing in equity, real estate, or other illiquid assets. Financial security first!

Why Emergency Fund is Your Financial Priority #1

An emergency fund is money set aside specifically for unexpected life events—job loss, medical emergencies, urgent home/vehicle repairs, or family crises. It's your financial safety net that prevents you from going into debt or selling investments at a loss during emergencies. Without an emergency fund, a single unexpected expense can derail years of financial planning. Most Indians have zero emergency savings and rely on credit cards, personal loans, or borrowing from family during crises. This creates a debt trap that's hard to escape. Building an emergency fund should be your absolute first financial goal, even before investing in equity, real estate, or retirement planning.

The size of your emergency fund depends on your employment type, number of dependents, and monthly expenses. Salaried employees with stable jobs need 6 months of expenses. Self-employed, freelancers, and business owners need 12 months due to income volatility. Add 2-3 months for each dependent (spouse, children, parents). Single-income families need more than dual-income families. If you have health issues or aging parents, increase the fund further. The goal is to survive comfortably for 6-12 months without any income. This gives you time to find a new job, recover from illness, or handle any crisis without financial stress.

Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund

Emergency funds must be liquid (accessible within 1-2 days) and safe (no risk of loss). Don't chase high returns—liquidity and safety are paramount. The ideal allocation: 50% in savings account (instant access), 30% in liquid mutual funds (1-2 days withdrawal), and 20% in short-term FDs with premature withdrawal facility. Never invest emergency funds in equity, real estate, locked-in FDs, or any illiquid asset. During emergencies, you need money immediately, not after selling assets at a loss or waiting for lock-in periods to end.

Emergency Fund Allocation Strategy

Savings Account (50%)

  • • Instant access 24/7
  • • No withdrawal restrictions
  • • 3-4% interest rate
  • • Use high-interest savings accounts
  • • Keep debit card handy

Liquid Funds (30%)

  • • 1-2 days withdrawal
  • • 5-6% returns
  • • Very low risk
  • • Better than savings account
  • • Instant redemption available

Short-term FD (20%)

  • • 6-7% interest rate
  • • Premature withdrawal allowed
  • • Small penalty (0.5-1%)
  • • Completely safe
  • • 3-6 month tenure

When to Use Your Emergency Fund

✓ Valid Emergencies

  • • Job loss or sudden unemployment
  • • Medical emergencies not covered by insurance
  • • Urgent home repairs (roof leak, plumbing burst)
  • • Vehicle breakdown requiring immediate repair
  • • Family emergencies requiring travel
  • • Natural disasters or accidents

✗ NOT Emergencies

  • • Vacations or travel plans
  • • Shopping sales or festival offers
  • • Buying new gadgets or electronics
  • • Lifestyle upgrades or renovations
  • • Investment opportunities
  • • Planned expenses you forgot to save for

How to Build Your Emergency Fund Fast

  • Set up auto-transfer: Automate savings on salary day before you start spending. Treat it like a mandatory EMI to yourself
  • Cut unnecessary expenses: Temporarily reduce wants—dining out, entertainment, shopping—until fund is complete
  • Use windfalls: Bonuses, tax refunds, gifts, or any unexpected income should go directly to emergency fund
  • Sell unused items: Declutter and sell old gadgets, clothes, furniture on OLX/Quickr to boost fund
  • Take up side gigs: Freelancing, consulting, or part-time work for 3-6 months to accelerate fund building
  • Pause investments: Stop SIPs and other investments temporarily until emergency fund is complete
  • Track progress weekly: Monitor your fund growth weekly to stay motivated and on track
  • Celebrate milestones: Reward yourself (small treats) when you hit 25%, 50%, 75%, 100% of target

Emergency Fund Examples by Profile

Profile 1: Single, Salaried, No Dependents

Monthly Expenses:₹30,000
Recommended Months:6 months
Emergency Fund Needed:₹1,80,000
Monthly Savings (20%):₹10,000
Time to Build:18 months

Profile 2: Married, 2 Kids, Single Income

Monthly Expenses:₹60,000
Recommended Months:9 months (6 + 3 for dependents)
Emergency Fund Needed:₹5,40,000
Monthly Savings (15%):₹15,000
Time to Build:36 months

Profile 3: Self-Employed, Freelancer

Monthly Expenses:₹50,000
Recommended Months:12 months (income volatility)
Emergency Fund Needed:₹6,00,000
Monthly Savings (25%):₹20,000
Time to Build:30 months

💡 Common Emergency Fund Mistakes

Investing in equity: Stock markets can fall 30-50% during crises. You may need to sell at huge losses when you need money most.
Keeping in locked FDs: Premature withdrawal penalties and delays defeat the purpose of emergency access.
Using credit cards: Credit cards are NOT emergency funds. They create debt at 36-42% interest, worsening your crisis.
Underestimating expenses: Most people underestimate by 30-40%. Track actual expenses for 3 months before calculating.
Using for non-emergencies: Once you dip into the fund for wants, it becomes a regular savings account, not emergency fund.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an emergency fund?

An emergency fund is money set aside for unexpected expenses like job loss, medical emergencies, home/car repairs. It provides financial cushion without needing to borrow or sell investments.

How much emergency fund do I need?

Salaried: 6 months expenses. Self-employed/Business: 12 months. Add 2-3 months for dependents. Single income family needs more than dual income. Consider job security and health conditions.

Where should I keep my emergency fund?

Keep in liquid, low-risk instruments: Savings account (instant access), liquid mutual funds (1-2 days), short-term FDs (premature withdrawal allowed). Avoid equity or locked-in investments.

Should I invest emergency fund for returns?

No! Priority is liquidity and safety, not returns. Keep 3 months in savings account, 3 months in liquid funds. Don't chase high returns - you may need money urgently when markets are down.

When should I use my emergency fund?

Use only for genuine emergencies: Job loss, medical emergencies, urgent home/vehicle repairs, family emergencies. NOT for: Vacations, shopping, planned expenses, investments, or lifestyle upgrades.