I'm trying to figure out if my husband and I have enough in emergency funds to stop saving for that and start putting extra money towards our student loans. Considering our current budget, we only have about 3-4 months' worth. But that budget includes shopping, eating out, etc- things I imagine we wouldn't be spending money on if we weren't employed. I figure that we could cut our current budget down quite a bit if we had to which would mean we could live off our emergency fund for more like 6 months. But I'm not sure if we should really just go off of our current budget or just the "necessities" budget. What would you do?
We have A LOT of student debt, and I'm inclined to put whatever extra funds we have towards that rather than our emergency fund. But I'm not sure if we have saved enough yet. Any advice is appreciated!
Re: How much do you have in emergency funds?
I think that's enough if you have debt to pay off, or would be for me and my family. We still have some CC debt (nearing the end of our debt snowball) and only have $2500 in an efund while we finish paying off the debt.
Conservatively, you will want to shoot for an ultimate e-fund of 8 months' worth of expenses.
You are probably in a good position to start paying back those loans aggressively if you are comfortable with the amount you have in savings. The old standard used to be a 3-month e-fund, so it sounds like you're in a good place.
Worst case scenario, you could also scale back those SL payments if you needed to help out your monthly budget, too, in the event you needed the money for expenses if something were to happen with either of your employment.
We saved up about 4 months for an e-fund and then starting dumping everything on the student loans. The end goal is to have 8-12 months in an e-fund after we pay off the last student loan. We are really looking forward to not having the student loans anymore.
I think you should have as many months as you feel comfortable though, think about how long would you be unemployed before you took a job in a field you were over qualified for or how willing are you to stretch the dollars you have if needed.
That sounds like enough when you are going to begin debt payoff. Especially if you can make that go further by cutting out extras.
We have about 3 months worth of an E-fund, but we can pay all of our bills with only 1 income. So we view it that if 1 person were to lose their job, we could still make it by with the 2nd person's income. We would definitely have to cut down on extra's, but we could do it. So our E-fund is there for some of those "extra's" or if God forbid, we both lose our jobs at the same time.
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We have about 3 1/2 months at our current spending levels. But we have about 6 months if we went bare bones. We also separately have about 6 months worth of food in our home, which would cut down costs exceptionally if we needed to.
We only have about 1 month's living expenses.
I know that we should have more, but we have some wedding debt we're paying off. The good news is that it's at 0% APR, and that it will be paid off within a year (maybe sooner).
I would like to have at least 3, but it's a process to get there.
FWIW, I'm only considering necessary expenses in our fund. Things like mortgage/car payments, utilities, grocery and gas. I figure if one of us loses our job, we're not going to be shopping, doing home improvement projects, or going out to dinner. We would cut back on all those things if that were to happen.
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Depending on who you ask, once you have a few thousand set aside for emergencies then you should focus on debt repayment since emergency funds have basically no return on money.