Emergency Fund for Family (Single Income): $8,000/Month Expenses
One earner supporting family, higher income risk. How much you need in emergency savings and how long it takes to build, based on $8,000/month in essential expenses.
Recommended Emergency Fund (9 months)
$72,000
$8,000/mo à 9 months = $72,000
Emergency Fund by Coverage Level
3 Months
$24,000
6 Months
$48,000
9 Months
$72,000
Recommended
12 Months
$96,000
How Long to Build Your Emergency Fund
| Saving/Month | 3 Months | 6 Months | 9 Months | 12 Months |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $200/mo | 120 mo | 240 mo | 360 mo | 480 mo |
| $500/mo | 48 mo | 96 mo | 144 mo | 192 mo |
| $750/mo | 32 mo | 64 mo | 96 mo | 128 mo |
| $1,000/mo | 24 mo | 48 mo | 72 mo | 96 mo |
| $1,500/mo | 16 mo | 32 mo | 48 mo | 64 mo |
| $2,000/mo | 12 mo | 24 mo | 36 mo | 48 mo |
| $3,000/mo | 8 mo | 16 mo | 24 mo | 32 mo |
Why You Need $72,000 in Emergency Savings
With $8,000 in monthly expenses, 9 months of coverage gives you $72,000 â enough to handle job loss, medical emergencies, major car or home repairs, or unexpected family needs without relying on high-interest debt.
Keep your emergency fund in a high-yield savings account (currently ~4.5% APY) for easy access while earning interest. At that rate, $72,000 earns about $270/month in interest alone.
Once your emergency fund is fully funded, redirect that savings toward investing. See our FIRE calculator or compound interest calculator to plan your next steps.
Personalize by Situation
Single Renter (6 mo)Single Homeowner (6 mo)Family (Dual Income) (3 mo)Self-Employed (12 mo)Freelancer/Contractor (9 mo)