Money Matters
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Back to the $1k e-fund discussion...
Why $1k isn't enough.
One night in the hospital...2 CT scans, antibiotics, surgery consult, etc. A car accident needing a deductible paid. And, a garage door opener breaking. In less than one month! Exactly why a $1k e-fund isn't enough. It's a great starting place, but get to 3 months saved before a debt snowball. Just MHO.
Re: Back to the $1k e-fund discussion...
Hope you are OK after the car accident!
And yes, $1000 in an e-fund is just too low for any emergency, IMO.
Love: March 2010 Marriage: July 2013 Debt Free: October 2014 TTC: May 2015
Meh, I have both and I would have been over the $1k if all that happened to me as well.
I do think there is no one-size-fits all amount for the efund before snowball. I would never be comfortable without my deductible for both health insurance and car insurance + enough to cover a basic repair on something with the house or car. I would never feel comfortable with onlly $1k.
Exactly! This too.
Things are just so expensive now...$1k doesn't go very far. That's the main point of my OP. If you have a bad month, and only have $1k, what's the point of a debt snowball at that point if you have to use your debts to pay for the repair/deductible, etc. that go beyond the $1k?
I understand DR's point and $1k is a nice, round easily attainable figure, but I think it leaves a false sense of security.
DH was talking about this with his coworkers the other day and said he couldn't believe that most of the guys he works with have maybe 1k saved for an emergency. In my mind I know that we've got enough to cover us for a few months should H lose his job or something come up, but I'm still paranoid and think we need more.
Hospital bills can be very high- even with great insurance. We have a 90/10 plan with a $500 deductible. 10% of a $300K NICU bill can be alot of money. Luckily, most good insurance plans cap your out of pocket expenses (ours was $6K).
I'd definitely look into what that number is for your plan and have an emergency fund for that.
Also, being a homeowner, $1K would definitely be too low of an emergency fund for us, but everyone has a different situation.