An emergency fund is cash set aside only for true surprises — a car repair, a medical bill, a lost job. Start with a goal of $500, then build toward one month of expenses, then three. Keep it in high-yield savings so it's separate but reachable.
What counts as an emergency
A real emergency is urgent, necessary, and unexpected — a car you need for work, a trip to urgent care, rent after a lost shift. Concert tickets and sales don't count. Be honest with yourself and the fund will be there when it matters.
How to build it without feeling it
- Automate a small transfer the day after payday — even $20 adds up.
- Park any windfalls (tax refund, birthday money, bonus) straight into it.
- Keep it in a separate high-yield savings account so it's not in spending reach.
- Pause it if a true emergency hits — that's literally what it's for — then refill.
$500 → handles most small surprises. One month of expenses → real breathing room. Three months → you can weather a job loss. Celebrate each one.
Common questions
Save or pay off debt first?
Build a small $500–$1,000 buffer first so a surprise doesn't push you deeper into debt, then attack high-interest debt aggressively, then grow the fund.
Where should I keep it?
High-yield savings: separate from checking, FDIC-insured, earns interest, and available in a day or two.