How big should your emergency fund be?
An emergency fund is the quiet foundation of every money plan. Three numbers tell you exactly where yours stands — and what it would take to finish it.
Nothing you enter is saved or sent anywhere — the math runs entirely in your browser.
The must-pays: housing, food, utilities, insurance, minimum debt payments.
Three months is a common starting point. Single-income households and variable earners often aim for more.
Only money you could actually reach within a few days.
Your emergency fund target
$0
$4,000 × 3 months
You currently cover
0.5 months
of essential expenses
Gap to close
$0
still to save toward the target
How many people have this covered?
Your next moves (educational, not advice)
- Closing the $10,000 gap in 12 months takes about $385 from each biweekly paycheck ($833 a month).
- Prefer a gentler pace? About $192 per biweekly paycheck ($417 a month) closes it in 24 months — slower is fine; steady is what matters.
- Automate the transfer for payday, so the fund builds before the money reaches your spending account.
WealthChem Emergency Fund worksheet — educational estimate only
Monthly essential expenses $4,000 × 3 months → target $12,000. Current savings $2,000 covers 0.5 months. Gap to close: $10,000 (about $833 a month for 12 months, or $417 a month for 24 months).
Generated by wealthchem.com/tools/emergency-fund. Not financial advice.
The formula, in the open
Target = Monthly Essential Expenses × Target Months
Example: $4,000 × 3 months = $12,000Assumptions
- Your essential expenses stay roughly steady month to month
- The fund sits somewhere liquid (like a savings account), so the full balance is reachable within days
- Three months is a common starting benchmark; single-income households and variable earners often aim higher
Limitations
- It counts essentials, not your full lifestyle spending — in a real emergency, trimming to essentials is the plan
- It can't predict the size of an actual emergency; it's a cushion, not a forecast
- Money parked in cash grows slowly — that's the trade-off for it being there the moment you need it
Want the concept behind the math? Emergency funds: the antidote to financial fragility →