There’s no single number that works for everyone, but there are clear benchmarks you can use as a guide depending on where you are in life.
The baseline everyone should hit first
- $500–$1,000 starter buffer. Before anything else. This prevents small emergencies from becoming debt. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the foundation.
- 3–6 months of expenses. This is the standard emergency fund target. If your monthly bills total $2,500, that’s $7,500–$15,000 in savings. It sounds like a lot, but you build it gradually.
By age and situation
- Under 25 or in college. $1,000–$3,000 is a realistic and good target. Focus on building the habit, not hitting a big number.
- Mid-20s with a full-time job. Aim for 3 months of expenses saved. At a minimum, have enough to cover a month of rent and a car repair at the same time.
- 30s with stability. 3–6 months of expenses plus the beginning of retirement savings. The two go together.
- Unexpected expenses vary by life stage. A homeowner needs more saved than a renter. Someone with kids needs more than someone without. Adjust accordingly.
Where to keep it
Your emergency savings should be in a high-yield savings account — not a checking account where you’ll spend it, not investments where the value can drop. A HYSA currently pays 4–5% interest, so your money grows while it sits there waiting to be needed.
A realistic savings rate
Financial advice often says to save 20% of your income. That’s a great target but not always possible. If you can save 5–10% right now, that’s genuinely good. Build from there. Saving anything consistently beats saving nothing perfectly.