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What's the size of your e-fund?

bmo88bmo88 member
500 Comments Fourth Anniversary 250 Love Its Name Dropper
edited October 2016 in Money Matters
Just curious how much others carry in their e-fund. I realize all of our expenses, finances and level of comfort are different. But if you are comfortable sharing either the amount or number of months in the e-fund, please do.

I sometimes wonder how much is the right amount in terms of being too much or too little for our situation. We currently have about 7 months worth of expenses, which is $26,500, in a high yield savings account (a whopping 1% interest rate). It's a fair amount of cash and some days I want to add more, while other days I want to put some in the market.

What's your general philosophy on how much you keep in it?
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Re: What's the size of your e-fund?

  • We have about $16k in non-retirement stocks and a mutual fund so the exact amount changes from day to day.

    We can live on DH's salary and he is in a high demand role so I'm okay with that amount.  It is only about 2.5 months of expenses if we don't change a thing about our spending savings habits, but in a true emergency we would cut a few grand out of our budget (ROTH contributions, general savings, vacation savings, gifts, etc.) not to mention cutting back on entertainment and fun money.

    How much is "right" varies so much depending on your comfort level and specific circumstances.

    How stable are your job(s)?  Are you both likely to be out of work at the same time?  How long would it take you to find new work?  How much debt to you have that you would need to continue to make payments on?  How much is the bare minimum you need to live on for a month?

    All of those questions (and probably more) plays into how big your EF needs to be.
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  • I'm on the high side of this scale. We're always working toward building our savings. We don't have different "buckets" of savings, though, so our savings is our e-fund, general savings, life savings, everything savings. I won't feel comfortable until we have about $50k in there, regardless of how many months' expenses it would cover. We have a house payment that eats up more take home pay than it should (lesson learned) so I need a bigger cushion to feel comfortable. Our goal is to be at $25k by the end of the year. We're close and we should hit it, as long as we can get our current spending under control. 

    I know it's not the norm to keep so much liquid, earning next to nothing. But the peace of mind it provides is worth so much more than any gains I would see in the market. 
  • I apologize, but this is long.  

    We have less of an emergency fund and more of an emergency plan.  If we were to have a true life-altering emergency, we would tackle it in this order:

    1) Normal cashflow - $2,000/month without changing retirement or lifestyle
    2) Checking account buffer - $1,500
    3) Spending funds - approx $1,500 - $7,500, depending on time of year
    4) Interest-free credit card for 12 months to provide float (I always keep one open)
    5) Emergency fund - $5,000
    6) HSA - $8,700
    7) Adjust lifestyle and eliminate retirement- $5,000/month available in cash flow 
    8) Sell the house - $50K equity
    9) Roth IRA contributions - $75K, which is approx. 14 months of expenses
    10) $145K per month in available credit on cards that could be discharged in bankruptcy.  My husband is a bankruptcy attorney.

    We also have the following as part of our emergency plan:
    -Comprehensive home, car, and umbrella insurance
    -$1.5M life insurance on each of us
    -Portable disability policies with own-occupation clauses and a retirement contribution rider
    -The ability to live on either one of our incomes and meet our legal obligations while contributing to retirement  
    -$500 in cash plus a bug-out bag for natural disasters

    The biggest thing missing is a comprehensive estate plan.  It's just because I've been too lazy to do it, and there hasn't been a pressing need for it.  It's on my list for the end of the year.

    While the usual approach is to hoard cash, it doesn't really make sense in our situation.  We make sure to insure against most huge catastrophes.  Our job situation makes it enormously unlikely we will ever face a job-loss crisis. We would have to both lose our jobs at the same time to face a true job-loss crisis.  If we were a single-income household, I would keep more cash on hand.

    Currently, most of our extra income goes to paying down debt to lower our exposure, but I am due for a large raise next year, and we're going to use it to really focus on taxable investments.  Those accounts will become my new #6 on this list.



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  • We have about 3 months in a straight up savings account, and another month in a stock account (we would pay a lot of capital gains on it because it's at least 20 years old). My husband is a teacher and his job is extremely stable (not many people can understand much less teach calculus based physics). I would feel better having six months worth of expenses. 
  • @AprilZ81: yeah there are so many variables. 

    Our jobs are pretty stable right now, but I am the breadwinner by far (make about 2.5 times DH). I am the Executive Director of a school and DH works as a teacher/Athletic Director at the same school. Our school is in it's 8th year running, so much more stable now, but a swing in enrollment or fundraising could change things dramatically. I am on the 2nd year of a 5 year contract and have had great performance reviews thus far, but finances of the institution are main main metric for evaluation. Raising $650k annually is not always easy.

    Our overall approach has been to knock out as much debt as possible, as quickly as possibly. We live way below our means (spend about 30% of total income on expenses) and we are socking away funds in savings and retirement accounts. Once I finish paying for grad school (cash flowing it), we will have more discretionary income.

    We both have life insurance policies, but stuck with $500k each. We don't believe in the 10-20 times income approach because that would be around $1.5-$2 million for me, which would be more than needed.Our approach was to pay off the house (about $220k balance right now) and then the surviving spouse would have some additional funds. When we have a child, we will each add an additional $250k policy. 

    We also carry other insurance policies at the appropriate levels. If necessary, we could tap into our roth IRAs, which have about $20k in them at the moment.
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  • $25k. We've decided to not build a "war chest" so to speak and we instead give a vast majority of our own surplus away to church and charity. If we needed to, we could suspend our giving.

    We have no debt aside from our mortgage and our loan to value ratio is only 34% so we could take out a loan if we needed to in a DIRE emergency. Or, we could use our CCs since those have high limits. Or, we could borrow money from DH's parents or from mine.

    We do have living items set aside for emergencies including food, so if we got really desperate, we would tap into our food stash.

    Basically, it doesn't worry me.

  • $6k - I know it may be low for some but we are comfortable with it so we can save for other goals in our life.
  • for me we are both self employed so we would never get fired.  DH has short term disability so if something happened to him in the short term we're not stressed financially. when we dip into it I put money back in until it reaches the 6k
  • Ha, well, this isn't a great time for me to answer this question, as I am undoubtedly holding way, way too much cash right now.  I was already carrying more cash than is smart and then my bonus paid out in August and I haven't moved any of it to investments yet.  

    My normal, true e-fund is $10k.  $10k would cover a little over 3 months of expenses if we cut back a bit.  This would also be assuming we had zero income coming in, which really seems unlikely as we would both have to lose our jobs, get no unemployment and also have no rental income coming in either (which we normally take in about $750/month in profit).  So, with either some form of unemployment and some rental income, it would last longer.  I am comfortable with this low amount because the reality is that we are in a good place financially and if there actually was a true emergency or sustained period of job loss, there are a lot of places we could cut back and then other sources to pull money from if we needed to.  

    We are definitely closer to the type of emergency-contingency plan that @Hoffse described.  The e-fund really is like last-resort someone needs bail money, lol.  

    All that being said, I am embarrassed to say that I have about 3 years of expenses in my general 1% savings account right now.  I need to get on top of moving the money.  
  • abrewer5abrewer5 member
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Love Its 100 Comments Name Dropper
    edited October 2016

    Right now we are at $4200 in our e-fund. And that is basically our only savings at this point (sad I know). We are close to paying off my SL and at that point I will work to get that number up to at least $10K and then start separate savings for various categories like: House Down payment, Home improvements, Dog, Clothing, etc.

    We also have $3000 in our HSA that I don't plan to touch unless it's a true medical emergency.


    ETA: We do have a loan on our boat (I know that's not very MM, yikes!) however we paid over 50% of the price in cash so I am confident we could dump the boat quickly if a true emergency like job loss or death happened. Although we can live off my salary alone and H would get close to $500K if I were to die which is more than enough to pay off our mortgage ($170K) and have money left over for living.

  • We have about $6.5K in there right now, but we had to dip into it for our driveway, but normally we keep $10K on hand which is maybe 3-4 months of expenses ( I may need to re-calculate). My company had layoffs in March (1st time in the 6 years I've been here) that touched our building/my department so I am leery of the future... but our goal is to have it back to $10K by the end of the year. But I always said now that we have a house, I would be more comfortable with $15-$20K in there in case anything serious happened or we needed to replace the roof or furnace....
  • $40k for us. I think that's been our ideal "don't go below this level" number and it would account for at least a year's worth of expenses without changing much in our retirement savings or anything else.

    Even though we don't have any debt other than our mortgage (and our payment is only $860ish a month), DH grew up with a loving but financially unstable family and he has some pretty serious hang-ups from that even now. He doesn't feel "safe" without a large buffer in both our checking and our savings accounts.

    We're both pretty stable in our careers and if I were to get laid off, I could easily find work doing just about anything pretty quickly. Something we've been discussing recently is starting up a rolling CD so we could at least do a little bit more with our cash savings than have it sit earning hardly any interest in a savings account.
  • $50k right now, but DH would like it to be at $100k.  We also have about a $15 buffer in our checking account.  DH will not consider any investments as part of our Efund.
  • DH and I agree on how much the efund should be and right now that particular account is holding our excess savings before it gets invested (there is a weekly transfer in from checking and then every once in awhile I take a chunk and throw it into the brokerage account) so it's really a disagreement of how low can that account go before we're uncomfortable. I don't let it dip below $12k unless it's an emergency and he would let it go down to $8k (3 months of bare necessities vs. 2 months). We both have very secure jobs however if one of us lost a job we could make it work on one salary.  We will increase the liquid savings if/when we ever get pregnant.

    Our current total cash/investment savings is about $33k not including retirement. Definitely not ideal but we had a $17k emergency during the holidays last year that we were able to pay for in "cash" (i.e. charge it for the massive amounts of points and then pay it off immediately) so it's been a rebuilding year. 

    We also have access to about $100k in credit that we could tap if we ran out of efund and got desperate. I don't count the equity in our home because it would be far more expensive to rent so we wouldn't sell the house in an emergency. We bought before our local market exploded so we couldn't even get a condo for what we pay for our single family home and our PITI is only 14% of our gross income.
  • This is fascinating!  We're in debt payoff mode (last and final debt being our mortgage which we hope to have paid off by 2020 if not sooner) so we only keep $1,000 in a true emergency fund.  That said, we could easily live off 20% of our combined incomes, so if one of us lost our jobs we would be okay. 
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  • hoffsehoffse member
    Sixth Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    edited October 2016
    To clarify on the life insurance, ours is that high in anticipation of kids.  H and I get a pretty sweet rate through the ABA.  When checking quotes I asked a random insurance guy (at a different company) if pregnancy makes rates go up.  He said that it could since there is some risk involved (albeit low, but still).  So I wanted to increase my insurance before TTC to lock in a lower rate, and we just did H's insurance at the same time since it's kind of a PITA.

    H and I had $500K policies up until very recently.  That's probably a bit more than we would need if we intended to stay child-less.  We intend life insurance to cover college and potentially graduate school in addition to living expenses.
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  • When we had more job risk I liked to have $20K.  We used some money for SL payoff and are paying aggressively to retirement this year so we are currently around $15K and I am comfortable with that but the goal is to rebuild to $20.  We could go down to $10-$12 if something came up and still be more than ok with both of us employed.  We also have money in our personal accounts that can contribute to an emergency if needed.

    Our only debt is our low interest rate mortgage.  We can afford this on one salary.  We do not have kids.

    When H didn't have a job we did a good job maintaining efund levels by belt tightening and we decreased financial risk by creating side gig income.  He drove Uber and we put our guest room on AirBnB.  Knowing those options exist are an extra level of assurance.
  • We have $15,000 in our Efund.  If we went very bare bones in our budget, that would get us about 7 months.

    We can also live off of just 1 of our incomes, so this would only be used if we both lost our jobs.

    Then beyond that we have $100k in a mutual fund that's a non-retirement investment.  So we could touch that if we needed to.  We also have a $28,000 paid for Mustang that is one of only so many made so it has kept its value well.  That would be the first to go if we needed cash.  Our house is also paid for so we could sell it and have all profit. That's about $100k.

    So our #1 emergency plan is to live off 1 income.  #2 would be tapping the Efund, #3 would be selling the Mustang, #4 we would tap into our mutual fund, then lastly we would sell the house. It would take a lot to get to any of these though.

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  • I'm not great about an e-fund.  I like to keep $1,000 in cash around ($1500 during hurricane season).  But it's not unusual to raid it a few times a year to pay a plumber/electrician/whatever, anyone who prefers being paid in cash, and then pay it right back.  So we don't use it for just emergencies.

    I keep at least $100 in a few checking/savings accounts here and there.  Sometimes there is a good bit more, but not usually.

    I typically don't carry balances on my CCs, so that is a lot of credit available in a worst case scenario.

    There are a few reasons I don't keep much of an e-fund.  Primarily, I have a HELOC with a good sized balance...but also (usually) a lot of credit available on it.  I'd rather pay that loan down with my excess cash every month than put it into a savings account, because it is still liquid funds if I needed it.  I try to keep at least $20K available in credit at any one time.

    I also have multiple sources of income.  I could lose my main f/t job and still be able to more than pay my bills.

    My bills each month including everything, even my rental property expenses, are around $3,000.  I could cut that down a little but, I already live fairly frugally, so not much.

    Right now, I'm in "growth" mode for my real estate investing.  Once I hit $5K/month pure cash flow, I plan to shift my priorities and focus more on debt repayment (ie mortgages, HELOC) and savings, rather than building my portfolio.  After I feel pretty solid in that step, then I'll go back to buying more properties.

    My biggest financial fear is an event like Hurricane Katrina.  If the city was evacuated for a long time, ALL my sources of income would be gone.  At least temporarily.  Though I do have rental payment insurance on one of my duplexes.  That would keep $2K/month coming in for up to 6 months.  And mystery shopping, lol.  I stepped that up big time when I was stuck in Miami for three months.  But MSing does not pay the bills.   

  • We currently have 4.5 months worth of take home income (which is about 6 months of current expenses) in savings account. My husband has been through several job losses so we try to keep a good chunk in our efund. That said when he was out of work we were able to pair down our budget so that we could live off of my salary without touching the efund with the exception of an unexpected car repair. For me, it's a feeling of security after having been through some tough times in the last past 10 years. Now that we have that all built up, I am busy working on saving for a new car for my husband.

    Always something to save for...
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  • julieanne912julieanne912 member
    Fifth Anniversary 500 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    edited October 2016
    @hoffse your item 10 is interesting.  I actually did that, unintentionally.  After the real estate crash I owed a hefty tax bill, from the year before when the market was at the peak.  I had the money in my savings account, but since my income was at 25ish% of what it was the year before, I wanted to keep that money to live off of.  So, like I had done the year before, I paid the taxes with my credit card, thinking there was no way things would stay bad, it was just a bad year etc etc, so I'd just carry the balance for a bit then pay it off when things got better.  Well things never really got much better for me and so in 2014 when I finally filed BK (should have done it MUCH earlier), my attorney said that it was a good thing I put those taxes on the card, vs not paying them, because I could now discharge them, when you can't discharge IRS debt.  

    So yeah, that shouldn't be anybody's first action plan in an emergency, but it is something that's available if needed. 
  • cbee817cbee817 member
    Ancient Membership 250 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    edited October 2016
    We have way too much in an e-fund: $23k in savings (it was $28k last week but I moved $5k to our Roths), $30k in CDs, $7.5k in a vacation fund. It's about 10 months of expenses if DH and I both lost our jobs and we don't change any spending including DD#2's day care payments ($1,000/month). I need to lighten up a bit on how much we keep in there. DH has been through 3 layoffs but that was all with his old school district. His new one is the best in our area/keeps growing, but he is not tenured yet. I've been with the same company for almost 13 years now, so I would say it is quite stable. I make about 2x what DH does. Life insurance- me $800k, DH $400k. Our Roths have $38k that we could take out too and we could sell the house (should clear $100k) - that would be more of a last resort for us.
    The worst emergency we had was a collapsed sewer line from our house to the street- 80+ year old clay tile pipe in the northeast. We had about 5 days to come up with $8,600. The only thing insurance would have covered is if it flooded our basement, but we have a drain tile system with a sump pump so it didn't do any damage. We had the money in savings, but opted for a 0% interest card and it was paid off in 12 months. 
    I grew up really poor, so I tend to over save so that my girls don't have to live through what I did as a kid. Like I said in the other post, baby steps..  :)

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  • @julianne, yeah bankruptcy is definitely not ideal - and that's why it's at the very end of the list for us - but it exists for a reason, and it's something people should consider if the situation warrants it. 

    The thing I finally realized about dedicated emergency funds is that the more you make and save in other types of assets, the less you really need in a dedicated fund (even if your lifestyle creeps up).  I occasionally use our efund for reimbursable expenses because I know I will get that money back, and it helps grease the wheels of our cash flow.  Those aren't emergencies though, just large expenses that I have to float until a specified date.

    We MIGHT increase that fund a little bit at the end of the year, or we might not.  H and I are on the fence about it. Even if we have a huge expense like the A/C dying, we usually have enough cash on hand to cover it, and if not, we have a really high savings rate.
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  • we have about $6000 right now, it's pretty drained after buying a house and remodeling.  I want at least $18-20,000.  We do have $14-16,000 in disney stocks from when my husband was a kid, and could use that in a real emergency situation.  Our jobs are pretty stable but i like the idea of having 3 months full expenses/6 months bare bones in emergency fund.  We may want to TTC in a year or so, so having a little extra is good.  I am starting a job where I will have short term disability and long term disability though so that would be factored into my thoughts about how much cash to have on hand too.
  • @hoffse I agree about the shifting priorities in having just a chunk of cash sitting liquid. Except for that biggy last year we have been able to cash-flow all of our "emergencies" that I know other people tap into their savings for (such as a boiler repair, new tires for the car, etc). At this point in our lives anything under $2k or so isn't an emergency because we can make it up from cash flow - it's just annoying to have to be more careful that month. I think if a $500 unexpected expense sent us reeling that I'd want even more in savings to make up for the cashflow shortage. 
  • @hoffse I agree about the shifting priorities in having just a chunk of cash sitting liquid. Except for that biggy last year we have been able to cash-flow all of our "emergencies" that I know other people tap into their savings for (such as a boiler repair, new tires for the car, etc). At this point in our lives anything under $2k or so isn't an emergency because we can make it up from cash flow - it's just annoying to have to be more careful that month. I think if a $500 unexpected expense sent us reeling that I'd want even more in savings to make up for the cashflow shortage. 
    Such a good point.  I tend to look at the 1500-2000 we set aside each month for savings/houseprojects/etc as an expense, when in reality that money could also all goto an emergency
  • @hoffse I agree about the shifting priorities in having just a chunk of cash sitting liquid. Except for that biggy last year we have been able to cash-flow all of our "emergencies" that I know other people tap into their savings for (such as a boiler repair, new tires for the car, etc). At this point in our lives anything under $2k or so isn't an emergency because we can make it up from cash flow - it's just annoying to have to be more careful that month. I think if a $500 unexpected expense sent us reeling that I'd want even more in savings to make up for the cashflow shortage. 
    Yes, the irony of the e-fund is that the time in your life when you need it most is also the time when it's hardest to accumulate.

    We are in the same position in terms of the approx. $2K cash flow.  We could also cut back from student loans a bit if we needed to.   We can handle any one of our individual insurance deductibles out of cash flow, and we have the HSA as a backstop if for example H and I were in a car wreck together.  

    There are only a couple of things I can think of that would necessitate a huge chunk of money very quickly that wouldn't be manageable out of cash flow.  The biggie for us is the A/C.  It's on borrowed time, but we know that.  This is the main reason I keep a cash fund around at all.

    Of course if a bunch of stuff happens at once that can get very expensive, but eventually you get to a point of catastrophe where you claim insurance.
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