Money Matters
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Who does thiS??

How many people consider their credit cards as their emergency fund??

Re: Who does thiS??

  • Definitely not me. I can't use them for my mortgage, and my goal is to never pay interest charges. I suppose in a pinch I'd use it for what I could, but it's no substitute for an e-fund.
  • Honestly, we do. We don't keep much liquid and can very easily pay our mortgage and bills on just one of our incomes. I do like to have $1,000 in the bank, but until we have kids, we'll stick to aggressively paying off debt (student loans) in lieu of having a big e-fund.
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  • We currently have 2 years in our E-Fund. It will only be about 1  year when we factor in the baby budget.

    We do however use credit cards when an emergency occurs. This way we have until a bill comes in to do our best to stop our current savings goal and pay the whole payment. This prevents us from taking any from the bank unless it is absolutely necessary. Fortunately our only emergencies have been vet bills and blown tires. We haven't been forced to touch the E-Fund since it was fully funded.

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  • We currently have 2 years in our E-Fund. It will only be about 1  year when we factor in the baby budget.

    We do however use credit cards when an emergency occurs. This way we have until a bill comes in to do our best to stop our current savings goal and pay the whole payment. This prevents us from taking any from the bank unless it is absolutely necessary. Fortunately our only emergencies have been vet bills and blown tires. We haven't been forced to touch the E-Fund since it was fully funded.

    We actually do this, too. I'll use the CC instead of the e-fund for things we can pay off within the statement period. I didn't really think of it that way when I answered before.
  • We currently have 2 years in our E-Fund. It will only be about 1  year when we factor in the baby budget.

    We do however use credit cards when an emergency occurs. This way we have until a bill comes in to do our best to stop our current savings goal and pay the whole payment. This prevents us from taking any from the bank unless it is absolutely necessary. Fortunately our only emergencies have been vet bills and blown tires. We haven't been forced to touch the E-Fund since it was fully funded.

    We actually do this, too. I'll use the CC instead of the e-fund for things we can pay off within the statement period. I didn't really think of it that way when I answered before.
    This is us as well.
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  • bmo88bmo88 member
    500 Comments Fourth Anniversary 250 Love Its Name Dropper
    For unexpected expenses, yes if we can pay it off within the period with no interest. Otherwise, we have 6 months of expenses in our emergency fund. We can't pay our mortgage, car payment or quite a few other bills with a credit card. Therefore, we have prioritized establishing savings while also paying down down.

    At a minimum, I would recommend finding a way to have at least $1,000 in a savings account.
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  • I use credit cards for everything... so I guess the answer to this is yes?

    We keep enough liquid on hand to cover things like insurance deductibles and a new A/C unit (that one is just a matter of time).  But I mean, I will always charge those items first to get points.

    I suppose there's a world where our expenses are so high at any given time that we would contemplate opening a CC that's interest-free for 6 or 12 months to help spread out payments.  But we'd pretty much have to both be in a car accident that puts us both in the hospital, totals both cars, and then have a tree fall on the house all at the same time for that to happen.
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  • I always charge things, but we keep an e-fund in the bank so we could pay off the credit card. so I guess the answer is kind-of. we have a high enough limit on one card that it would cover 6 months of expenses, but there are several things (mortgage, car payment, student loans) that we can't pay with a credit card (I wish we could just because that would be a lot of points every month). 
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  • We have a large E-fund in an online banking account, but if there is an "emergency" we will use the credit card to pay for it, then transfer the $ from our e-fund to cover it once the bills comes.

     

  • vlagrl29 said:

    We currently have 2 years in our E-Fund. It will only be about 1  year when we factor in the baby budget.

    We do however use credit cards when an emergency occurs. This way we have until a bill comes in to do our best to stop our current savings goal and pay the whole payment. This prevents us from taking any from the bank unless it is absolutely necessary. Fortunately our only emergencies have been vet bills and blown tires. We haven't been forced to touch the E-Fund since it was fully funded.

    We actually do this, too. I'll use the CC instead of the e-fund for things we can pay off within the statement period. I didn't really think of it that way when I answered before.
    This is us as well.
    Same here. 
  • We charge everything we possibly can to get the points/cash back/free financing for 6,12, etc months. We have a giant emergency fund, but don't dip into it unless we absolutely need to and have been moving the bulk of what we save each year to our Roth IRA accounts and 529 plans for the girls. Just recently we had a massive sewer job (entire line was replaced) that cost $8,200. It's on a credit card that we got amazon prime free for 1 year, $175 worth of gift cards, and 15 month interest free to pay it back. We don't have to take the $ out of savings, we pay back $700/month (it'll be paid off in December), and we got some free stuff out of the deal.. win, win. 
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  • If you mean not having an emergency fund and paying off the credit card over time then no. We put everything we can on the card, but paid in full at the end of the month. Always. True emergencies would get transferred out of the emergency fund to cover the payment.
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  • Not a credit card, but I sort of use my Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) as an E-fund.  I do keep about $1,000 E-fund, outside of that.  However, I currently have a balance on my HELOC, so I throw most of my disposable income onto that rather than save it for a larger E-fund.

    Once that balance is paid off, then I'll look to throwing my disposable income to a larger E-fund.

  • We do, because we are working on getting out of debt.  We are still renting, so we have an extra $2-4K/month to throw at debt.  I figure we can cash flow almost anything during the month if an emergency came up, and our interest rate on debt is higher than what it would be in a savings account.  Once we get consumer debt paid off, we will build up a larger emergency fund. 

  • We have an E-fund separate from our CCs too. We are working to build it back up after buying a new Minivan in October.

    We do put as much as possible on CCs to get the rewards, but we ALWAYS pay them off in full and on time each month. CCs are really only worth it IF you pay them off in full and on time, otherwise you get hit with high interest rates.

    If things went kaput in our family and we needed access to large cash advances quickly that would exhaust the e-Fund then, yes we could tap into the CCs as a last resort sort of thing. We have access to about $40k on our combined CCs.

    IF this happened, we'd probably take a loan from DH's parents, which we've done twice before (for "responsible" home-buying, home-related purchases), and pay off the high interest CCs and then pay back his parents over time more slowly. Caveat: I'm not generally a fan of family lending money to family. But, I also take it on a case-by-case basis.  

  • abrewer5abrewer5 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited March 2015

    Currently I'd consider our credit card our emergency fund. We have a decent amount in savings about $5K but I don't want to tap into it for small things. I will most likely put our new washer (if H can't fix ours) on our home depot credit card with 0% interest and pay it off well before the promotion period expires.

    I'm working on getting away from credit cards completely, but I'm not as adverse to them as others on this board.

    Edited to correct a spelling error.

  • We are trying not to, but having to cash flow the expenses of having DD and trying to take care of some other needs around our house, we are getting pretty low on our emergency fund.

    MW and I both have car repairs that we need to get done sooner than later.  My mom keeps telling me that we could always borrow money from them and pay them back, but I really don't want to do this since the last time that I had them bail me out it wasn't good which is why I ended up paying for my college by myself versus them helping me.
  • It's not our emergency fund, but like many posters here, credit cards are our first line of spending for anything, including emergencies. This is to get points and cash back bonuses, plus the extra traceability and the bit of breathing room the grace period affords. Then we pay all credit card balances off in full every month.

    If we were to need a new appliance in an emergency situation (this has come up twice already), we would likely take advantage of the zero-interest financing available for them. We've done that before through Home Depot and paid it off before the zero-interest period was up - again, basically for breathing room and to keep our money working for us for longer.
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