Emergency Fund — How Much Do You Need & Where to Keep It?
How to build an emergency fund. 3-6 months of expenses, savings account vs bonds vs money market funds.
10 min czytaniaEmergency Fund — How Much Do You Need & Where to Keep It?
An emergency fund is the foundation of personal finance. It's the first thing you build — before investing, before paying down low-interest debt, before renovations or vacations. This article answers two questions: how much to save, and where to keep it in 2026, with a European context.
Who this is for
- You've never had an emergency fund and don't know how much to target.
- You have €2–5k saved and wonder if it's enough (usually no).
- You want to optimize where your emergency fund sits.
The 3–6 months rule
Financial standard: 3–6 months of your expenses (not income!). Exact number depends on your life.
3 months — who?
- Stable employment contract, civil service, tenured roles.
- Two incomes in the household.
- No kids or financially independent kids.
- Younger, easy to find work.
6 months — who?
- Freelance, contract, self-employed, commission-based.
- Single income household.
- Dependent children.
- Variable income.
- Industry with longer hiring cycles.
9–12 months — who?
- Business owners.
- Mortgage holders with job insecurity.
- Sectors in contraction.
Expenses, not income
Common mistake: people size the fund from gross salary when they should size it from actual monthly spending.
If you earn €4,000 net and spend €2,200, your emergency fund should be €6,600–13,200 (not €12,000–24,000).
Numerical example (2026)
Scenario A: single, employee, Berlin
- Monthly expenses: €2,400 (rent 1,200, food 400, transport 100, subs 80, fun 300, buffer 320).
- Fund: 3 × €2,400 = €7,200.
Scenario B: family 2+2, self-employed
- Monthly expenses: €4,800.
- Fund: 6 × €4,800 = €28,800.
Scenario C: Polish freelancer, Warsaw
- Monthly expenses: PLN 5,500.
- Fund: 6 × 5,500 = PLN 33,000.
Detailed method: calculating your expenses
- List 3 months of expenses from bank + cash + cards.
- Exclude one-off weirdness (laptop, wedding).
- Add annual expenses ÷ 12 (insurance, car service, holidays, gifts).
- Add a 5–10% "unknown unknowns" buffer.
- Multiply × 3 or × 6.
Most people underestimate expenses by 20–30% because they forget annual costs.
Where to keep an emergency fund (2026, European context)
Requirements: liquidity (1–3 days), safety (deposit insurance), rate ≥ inflation.
High-yield savings account (core)
- Rates 2026: 2.5%–4.0% (eurozone) / 4.0%–5.5% (Poland).
- Instant access.
- EU deposit insurance up to €100k per bank per person.
- Examples: Trade Republic, Revolut Savings, Scalable Capital, local online banks.
Government bonds (retail)
- Poland — COI (4y): 5.75% first year, then inflation + margin.
- Germany: short-dated Bunds / money market alternatives.
- Italy — BTP Valore: ~4% multi-year.
- Early redemption available with small fee; 100% state-backed.
Term deposits / CDs
- 3–12 months locked, 3–5% rates.
- Breaking the term = lost interest.
Money market funds (UCITS)
- ~3–4% yield, expense ratio 0.1–0.2%.
- T+1 to T+3 liquidity.
- Low but non-zero capital fluctuation.
Avoid
- Stocks, ETFs, crypto: drop 20–40% in the exact crisis when you need the fund.
- Platforms without deposit insurance.
- Illiquid assets (real estate, collectibles).
Split strategy (1/3 + 2/3)
- 1/3 in an instant-access savings account.
- 2/3 in short-term bonds or a money market fund for better yield.
Example for a €15,000 fund:
- €5,000 in HYSA at 3.5% → ~€175 gross/year.
- €10,000 in money market / short bonds at 4.0% → ~€400 gross/year.
- Total: ~€575/year vs €0 in a checking account.
Variants and strategies
Laddered bonds
Buy a new bond tranche every month. After 12 months you have a ladder with monthly maturities and steady yield.
Currency-hedged split
Keep 70–90% in your home currency (your expenses are in that currency), 10–30% in USD/EUR for FX protection.
Tiered emergency fund
- Tier 1: €1,000–2,000 instant (checking or HYSA) — small emergencies.
- Tier 2: 1–2 months expenses (HYSA) — medium events.
- Tier 3: remaining 1–4 months (bonds / money market) — longer crises.
Risks, mistakes, pitfalls
- Keeping it in a current account — losing 3–5% purchasing power yearly to inflation.
- Investing it in stocks — drops when you need it most.
- Raiding it for "deals" — emergency fund is emergency fund, not a buying buffer.
- Underestimating expenses — €15k "enough" becomes €10k after 6 months of unemployment.
- Not updating it — expenses grow with life; fund should too.
- Concentration risk — >€100k in a single bank loses deposit insurance coverage.
Comparison: fund vs alternatives
| Tool | Access | Cost | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emergency fund | 1–3 days | 0% (earns interest) | Low |
| Credit line | Instant | 8–15% APR | Medium |
| Credit card | Instant | 0% (grace) / 18% | Discipline |
| Family loan | Variable | 0% | Emotional |
| Selling assets | 1–60 days | Opportunity cost | Loss of upside |
The fund wins on combined availability and cost.
Action plan 30/60/90 days
- Days 0–30: Calculate 3 months of expenses. Set target (3 or 6 months). Open a separate HYSA at a different bank than your checking. Automate transfers (10%+ of income).
- Days 30–60: Save first €500–1,000 as "mini fund" for small emergencies. Cut 2–3 biggest discretionary expenses. Open brokerage / bond platform.
- Days 60–90: €2,000–5,000 saved. Buy first tranche of short bonds or money market fund. Plan path to full fund (typically 6–24 months).
FAQ
Should I pay off my mortgage instead of building a fund? No — build at least 1 month fund first, then balance mortgage payments and fund growth.
What if I have high-interest debt? Mini-fund first (€1,000) → pay off credit cards / payday loans → then build full fund.
Does the emergency fund count as net worth? Yes. It's part of your liquid net worth.
How often should I tap it? Rarely. Only actual emergencies — job loss, medical, essential repairs. Not vacations or new phones.
What do I do once the fund is full? Start investing (broad ETFs, bonds), contribute to tax-advantaged accounts, buy real estate if appropriate.
How Freenance helps
Freenance tracks your real monthly expenses, shows your current emergency fund coverage, and reports your Financial Freedom Runway — how many months you could survive without income. It imports transactions from EU banks, Revolut, and brokers, so the number is always current. Start your free trial →
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