How Much Money Should You Have Set Aside In Emergency Cash Reserves?
Living in a society which encourages spending, it can be difficult to remember the power of having savings. Cash, however, creates opportunities that spending never can. An emergency cash fund is simply a savings account, and having one in the appropriate amount will change your life for the better.
When something unexpected comes up, like Covid-19/The Cornavirus, your emergency fund protects your other long-term investments like Real Estate and maybe your life!
You use your emergency funds so you don't have to withdraw from a retirement account (like a 401(k) or IRA) [which aren't smart ways to grow your wealth anyway] and pay early withdrawal fees & taxes
Also, cash puts you in a position to buy when everyone else wants to sell, allowing you to make money in good and bad times.
For this very reason, we encourage people to have an "opportunity fund" as well as an "emergency fund" AND create High Volume, High Profit,Passive Income Businesses that can be used to ramp up your cash flow without getting a 2nd job!!!
The opportunity fund is cash set aside that you can use to invest during bad times in the stock markets (which isn't the fastest way to grow your wealth anyway).
But first, you have to build up your emergency fund , not just by trying to save but by creating a Residual Income Cash Machine that'll throw off lots of extra cash for your family
Additional Resources:
How Much You Should Have in an Emergency Cash Fund?
Good
At a minimum, you should have three months of living expenses in your emergency fund. This means if you need $3,000 a month to cover your basic needs like your mortgage or rent, utilities, gas, and food, then you need $9,000 in your emergency fund.
Better
If you have people who depend on you financially, like children or a spouse, your emergency fund should be six months' worth of living expenses, at a minimum. In addition, if you work in a career that has high turnover or a high injury rate, you'll want to have double the amount of emergency fund as someone who works in a tenured career where layoffs rarely occur.
Best
As you get better at saving, work toward accumulating 12 months of living expenses in a savings account. If you're a high wage earner go for the $100,000 challenge: Get $100,000 of savings parked in a safe investment. Too many high wage earners feel the need to invest everything—which leaves them no liquid assets left over for emergencies or opportunities.
Where You Should Invest Your Emergency Cash Fund
Where should you invest your cash reserves? In a safe, easily accessible account. NOT in stocks. Not in something that has withdrawal penalties or big tax consequences for cashing it in. The key is your emergency fund should be in something low-risk.
Getting Motivated to Save
If you need some motivation to save a bit more, print the top 10 reasons list below and tape it to your refrigerator door, put a copy on your desk at work, or keep it in your car.
Read it frequently, until you can feel the power of cash—until saving feels better and more powerful than spending.
Top 10 Reasons to Have an Emergency Cash Fund
- Protects your family in case of a job loss
- Provides reserves for health or other family emergencies
- Gives you the ability to pursue attractive investment opportunities as they come along
- Helps you negotiate lower prices on major purchases
- Keeps you from losing money since you won’t need to sell other investments during down markets
- Allows you to avoid tax penalties from having to pull money out of retirement accounts too early.
- Reduces stress, which increases health and well being
- Eliminates numerous marital arguments
- Creates a cushion to use for major household repairs
- Enables you to pursue bargain buying at someone else’s expense (someone who desperately needs cash)
Is There Need for Having an Emergency Cash Fund Once Retired?
NEWS FLASH: The truth is retirement is NOT an age so much, but when your passive income streams equal or exceed your monthly expenses so you no longer have to work as an employee or trade time for money.
Once retired, if you are over age 59 1/2 you can withdraw from IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s and other types of retirement accounts; any withdrawal is subject to income taxes, but not penalty taxes. Many people think that since they can withdraw at will, they no longer need an emergency fund. This is not true.
Hopefully, you've drafted a thorough retirement budget, but invariably you will be missing some expense items—and emergencies will still happen. A common unforeseen expense we see occur in retirement is when someone's adult child has an emergency, with 82% of parents saying that they would "make a major financial sacrifice for their adult child."
Even in retirement, you'll want funds that you didn't include as part of your official retirement plan, and you'll want them set aside in cash, just in case.
Building up this type of cash reserve account is one of the five steps you'll want to take within five years of retirement or better yet start right now to generate extra money to build up your cash reserves
It’s your turn to be the creator of your own life.
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