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Emergency Fund Calculator

Find out exactly how large your emergency fund should be.

$
Rent/EMI + food + utilities + insurance + minimum loan payments
1: Government/large company. 2: Private sector. 3: Self-employed/freelancer.
Spouse, children, parents who depend on your income
$
What you've already set aside as emergency fund
$
How much you can save toward the emergency fund each month

Common questions

Where should I keep my emergency fund?
Split it: 1–2 months in a zero-balance savings account (instant access), the rest in a liquid mutual fund or sweep-in FD (same-day redemption, higher interest). Never in equity funds — a market crash often coincides with when you need the money most.
Should my emergency fund earn returns?
Liquid mutual funds currently yield 6.5–7%, comparable to savings accounts but slightly better. Use liquid funds for the bulk of your emergency fund. The goal isn't maximum return — it's availability when you need it. Don't sacrifice liquidity for yield.
Should I stop other investments until my emergency fund is complete?
Semi-yes. Build a 2-month emergency fund first, then start long-term investing while simultaneously building toward your full 6-month target. Don't delay all investments waiting to complete the full emergency fund — time in market matters.
What counts as a real emergency?
Job loss (primary use case), major unexpected medical expense, home repair emergency (flooding, structural), critical appliance failure. What does NOT count as emergency: vacation, sale on Amazon, "good investment opportunity," planned annual expenses like car insurance renewal.
Should a couple combine their emergency funds?
Yes — if both are employed, risk is partially diversified (both rarely lose jobs simultaneously). A couple can often get away with 4 months vs the 6 months a single-income household needs. If single income, actually build 6–9 months.

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