Building Emergency Funds

Rainy Day Fund

MainStreet.com quoted me in Here’s How to Build a Sturdy Household ‘Cash Crisis’ Fund. It reads, in part,

Americans aren’t big on emergency savings funds: only four in ten U.S. adults have one, according to a 2015 study by Bankrate.

But if your Jeep Cherokee needs $1,000 worth of transmission work, or you need to cover a $6,500 health care plan deductible in a medical emergency, a household rainy day fund may be one of the best insurance policies you’ll ever own.

Before we get on the path to starting a savings fund quickly and effectively, understand first that an emergency fund and a rainy day fund are two different animals. A rainy day fund is smaller in size than an emergency fund: whereas $1,000 might form a good rainy fund, a decent-sized emergency fund should have between $3,000 and $10,000 in cash.

The key to building both, however, is similar – just get started.

“Jump start an emergency fund with a windfall like a tax refund, profit sharing check, stock sale, or an inheritance,” says Sharon Marchisello, author of the book Live Cheaply, Be Happy, Grow Wealthy.

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Once you have accumulated a decent-sized emergency fund, don’t take the experience for granted.

Building the perfect emergency fund calls one part diligence, one part creativity, and one part patience. Put all three together and sleep easier at night as your safety net fund grows accordingly.