how much (how many months) should be in your emergency acct if you have stable income?

Anonymous
I think the recommendation is to have 6 months of expenses saved up. I'm trying to save for a house, so I'm reluctant to throw all of my savings into an emergency fund. My source of income is steady and reliable. The only hiccup was the shutdown, but even then I would have been paid retroactively. How many months do I really need to have saved up? Right now I have 2 months saved.
Anonymous
Well, at lot of this depends on your comfort level.

But also, just in general for purchasing a home for th first time - owning a home is expensive. There's always a little repair to do, or something you need to buy, or something that's unexpected (The gas bill is higher than you're used to, or there's a fee you didn't know, or you move in and the dishwasher breaks, or something).

So, even though you ant as high a down payment as possible, don't put ALL your money into the down payment. You need a little cushion at that point to be comfortable in the new home.

(you get a slight cushion because of how mortgages are paid - you typically make your first payment AFTER a month, not to start a month, so often you miss a month's housing payment - but with moving expenses, close out expenses from the old place, etc that is gone quickly).
Anonymous
6-8
Anonymous
When you move in, the dishwasher WILL break. Trust me.

4-6, and be ready to spend most of it in the first two months.
Anonymous
For my comfort level, it would depend on the house. How new is the roof? How new is the hot water heater / boiler / washer / dryer? Are the windows from the dawn of time? Have the bricks been repointed? Any major tree limbs need to be trimmed?

Been there, done that - all of it within 5 years. It has paid off now, some years later, but it was a doozy there for awhile.

Anonymous
None. I don't need an "emergency account", because I have got my shit locked down.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:None. I don't need an "emergency account", because I have got my shit locked down.


Um, what the hell does that even mean?
Anonymous
Remember that emergencies come in many forms - they are not just job loss. They are sickness, death, acts of mother nature, etc. Your job may be stable but if a hurricane comes in and destroys your home and you need a place to stay for a year until it's fixed and insurance pays out, then you need more than 2 months' of expenses. Or if a breadwinner suddenly becomes disabled or dies, you will likely need more than what you have saved so far.
Anonymous
I would have six, ESPECIALLY since you're wanting to buy a house. If you don't, the second you buy it something major is going to break and you're going to be screwed. Think long term, don't go for the easy fix - set up the emergency fund and then save for the house. It'll be worth it, I promise.
Anonymous
I would have six months to live well, another six months of bare bones (health insurance, mortgage, and food), and a separate emergency fund for house repairs and other things that come up
Anonymous
Start with a goal of 6 months. After you get that to point, relax your emergency fund allotment to half until you reach 1 year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:None. I don't need an "emergency account", because I have got my shit locked down.


Um, what the hell does that even mean?


Padlock on toilet.
Anonymous
Yah insurance is my emergency
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:None. I don't need an "emergency account", because I have got my shit locked down.


Um, what the hell does that even mean?


1. I make sure I am not going to get fired: if anything, I fire people.
2. I am not going to get sick: I am as strong as an ox, and only eat fruit, vegetables and, on special occasions, nuts.
3. No hurricane is going to destroy my house: it is overbuilt from steel and concrete, not plywood and tyvek.
4. My wife is a thoroughbred, and she has birthed strong children who won't sicken either.

So no, I have no "emergency" account, because I will have no emergencies. In short, I have my shit locked down. I encourage you to lock your shit down too.
Anonymous
We normally have 4-6 months of ONE income saved up. We wouldn't both be laid off at the same time. Both of us are in very stable career fields.
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