Totally Worth It, Week 4: Create an emergency fund
Itâs time to add a new line item to your budget: your emergency fund.
Youâve probably read somewhere that you should have three to six monthsâ worth of expenses set aside. For most people, that is an astronomical amount. Do not add up your expenses, multiply by six and fixate on that number.
Close to 40% of Americans could not afford a $400 unexpected expense without having to carry a balance on a credit card or borrow money or sell something. Thatâs not just among people with student loan debt, or people in their 20s and 30s, or people who just started budgeting. Thatâs almost 40% of everyone in the United States.
If you have $100 set aside for an emergency, youâre ahead of a lot of people. If you get to $400, youâre ahead of well over a third of the people who live in America. When you look at it that way, you realize how rare having half a yearâs expenses set aside really is.
How much should be in my emergency fund?
Start small. Again, every dollar you get into this category is a victory. Set $400 as your first goal. Work your way up from there.
If you are in hard-core debt paydown mode, it might seem foolish to have money just sitting in your bank account, not doing anything. But it is doing something: Itâs waiting for an inevitable emergency. That money is the National Guard of your budget, ready to mobilize at a momentâs notice.
If you throw every single spare dollar you have at your debt, what will you do when an emergency happens? You will cycle right back into debt. Thatâs not progress.
Some personal finance gurus say to have a $1,000 fund when you get started, and $1,000 is a good number. I think that, given how expensive things are in Southern California, $2,000 makes more sense as a workable amount to have on hand. Itâll cover most unexpected expenses.
When you spend from your emergency fund, you have to prioritize paying yourself back. That might mean rejiggering your budget for the next couple of months to âtop upâ that emergency reserve before throwing extra at debt, or cutting back on discretionary expenses for a bit. No fun, I know! But itâll be worth the peace of mind when something bad happens and you can say, âNo problem.â
Once youâve got a good handle on your debt, then itâs time to think about becoming one of those super savers with three to six months of cushion in your savings account.
By the way, that should be three to six months of absolutely necessary expenses, not total outflow. If thereâs an emergency, you probably arenât thinking much about your dining-out budget. A theoretical month of emergency savings should be enough to cover your necessities (rent, utilities, food, transportation) and debt payments, not the maximum amount you spend per month.
What constitutes an emergency?
To me, an emergency is an expense you couldnât have foreseen. A last-minute flight across the country for a funeral. Having to move unexpectedly and needing the deposit for a new place before you get your security deposit back.
One that millions of people encountered in 2020: losing your job and having to pay your bills out of pocket until unemployment kicks in.
With this eight-week newsletter course from the Los Angeles Times, assistant editor Jessica Roy will help you get a handle on your money stuff.
Where do I keep my emergency fund?
In my opinion, you need only two bank accounts: checking and interest savings. If youâve combined finances with someone else, maybe you want one more checking account for your personal fun money. Thatâs it, though. Some people have one shared checking account for necessities and one shared for fun stuff and another personal account and then separate savings accounts for each savings goal. To me, if youâre budgeting correctly, that just creates a lot of extra work. I keep the âsomeday fundsâ and my emergency fund in the savings account that earns a little interest, and everything else in checking. (Getting to budget the interest on your savings is one of budgetingâs great joys. Yes, thank you, I would like the money that my money earned to go toward my future vacation.)
This is not a newsletter about investing. If you want to invest, great! A separate investment account is a good thing, as is contributing to an employer-sponsored retirement account. A budget line for what you can afford to put into it every month, even better. But despite the high yields in the market right now, itâs not smart to put your rainy-day money into stocks. The kinds of emergencies that lead to things like job or home loss sometimes come from much larger societal emergencies â the kind that bring the market crashing down and take your hard-earned savings with it.
What about my âsomeday fundsâ that I made in Week 1?
If you followed along on Week 1 when we made our budgets, youâre already setting aside a little bit for things like car repairs and vet bills and medical expenses. Some people think of those as emergency expenses. I donât.
I mean, yes, obviously, if your car engine dies, itâs an emergency. But if youâve ever owned a car, or a pet, or a human body, you know they break down and need repairs sometimes. The only unexpected part is the âwhen.â So I like to save for these separately, stashing away a little bit of money every month so that when the carâs serpentine belt or the dogâs ACL blows out, Iâm ready.
If you need more than whatâs in the car or pet fund at that point, especially when youâre just starting to build those up, take it from your emergency savings. But in the long run, the goal is to be able to say, âOh, the car needs new brakes? Thatâs fine. Weâve been saving for this.â
Not everyone would agree with how I categorize these types of expenses. If youâd rather throw more money at your monthly emergency fund and not save separately for individual categories, thatâs OK too! As I said before, your brain, your priorities and your budget are all going to be different from mine. Iâm giving you the information and empowering you to figure out how to use it.
We put only a couple of those âsomeday fundsâ into the budget in Week 1 because I didnât want to totally overwhelm you. Honestly, there are a lot of âsomedaysâ to save up for. As I write this, I am saving up for both the deductible and the out-of-pocket max on my health insurance for when I have a baby. My car is 10 years old and I plan to run it into the ground, but it wonât last forever, so a new-car fund is on my budget. When my husband and I decided to upgrade our phones, that was a new âsomedayâ category. The farther away those expenses are, the less you have to put aside every month to fully fund them by the time they pop up. You donât have to put every single expense youâll ever have into your budget right now, but keep in mind as you go on your budgeting journey that thereâs stuff youâll want down the road, and the right time to start saving for them is now.
Hang in there
Are you panicking? Maybe a little? Itâs hard to pay off debt and also feel as though you need to save up for 10,000 things you will want and need in the future, plus a bunch more things you canât even think of right now. Itâs a lot. Just start small.
Youâre doing great.
Next week, weâll talk about how to tackle debt so youâll have more money for the big goals and fun stuff.
â Jessica
P.S.
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