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Emergency Fund Calculator

Example: $5,000/month expenses × 4.5 months = $22,500 target

An emergency fund is your financial safety net for unexpected expenses or job loss. This calculator determines the right amount based on your risk tolerance, how easily you could find new work, and your household situation.
Last reviewed by SparkCalc editorial team · February 2024
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Current savings vs target

Target Emergency Fund

Months Recommended

Based on your risk profile

Current Coverage

Amount Still Needed

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How We Calculate This

Months recommended = Base (from risk tolerance) + Employability adjustment + 0.5 per dependent - Dual income reduction (based on spouse employability). Result is capped between 2 and 12 months.

Methodology last reviewed: February 2024. How SparkCalc works

Sources: U.S. CFPB: An essential guide to building an emergency fund

Frequently Asked Questions

How does risk tolerance affect my target?

Conservative (low risk tolerance) means you prefer a larger cushion, adding more months. Higher risk tolerance means you are comfortable with a smaller buffer.

Why does employability matter?

If you have in-demand skills and could find a new job quickly, you need less runway. If finding work takes longer in your field, you need more savings to cover that period.

Where should I keep my emergency fund?

Use a high-yield savings account for easy access and decent returns. Avoid investing emergency funds in stocks or locking them in term deposits.

What counts as an emergency?

Job loss, medical emergencies, major car repairs, and essential home repairs. Vacations and predictable expenses are not emergencies.

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This calculator provides estimates only. Actual results may vary. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making financial decisions.