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Saturday, February 26, 2011

How to Prepare an Emergency Fund

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How to Prepare an Emergency Fund: "
Having an emergency fund readily available at all times is invariably a good idea. It can protect you in a time of job loss or during a natural disaster period that directly impacts your living arrangements.

Experts recommend having three to six months of expenses put aside so that you can rely on these savings to buffer you in an emergency.[1] Take these steps to start preparing your emergency fund.


Steps


  1. Increase your take home pay. This can be done in various ways:
    • If you are paying into a 401k (superannuation) or other retirement savings program, as well as any other voluntary pay deductions, temporarily cease or decrease those contributions until you have built up your emergency fund. As soon as you have built up enough savings, restore the contributions.
    • If you usually get a tax refund, ask your employer to decrease the amount of taxes you have withheld from your paycheck.
    • If available, consider working some overtime or doing some freelance work. If it's not too tiring or conflicting with your day job, you might also consider a little weekend or holiday work doing something else you're good at, such as working with a local retailer.

  2. The other kind of dough
    The other kind of dough
    Attempt to live on less. If you are already accomplished at doing this, in the event of a disaster, your expenses will be lower already, and you will only need a smaller emergency fund.
    • Cook more food at home instead of eating out. This can help you save money and eat more healthfully.
    • Grow as much of your own food as possible by dedicating one portion of your garden to edible plants. If you're not a keen gardener or you have small space, grow easy plants like tomatoes and summer squash in containers.

  3. Nice try buddy...
    Nice try buddy...
    Always remember the value of having insurance as a standard means for protecting yourself against uncertainty but never over extend your finances by paying too much either. Shop around for the best insurance rates and check for better deals regularly. There is no need to feel loyal to one insurance provider over another; keep your own interests at the forefront.
    • Have house insurance, contents insurance, and car insurance. Although good, you can pass on life insurance if you can't afford it currently but keep it in mind for later. Income protection insurance is another good consideration alongside your emergency fund. And if you are in a country where health care is expensive and your employer isn't funding health insurance, you'll need this as well.
    • Lower your insurance rates by raising your deductibles, the amount you pay out of pocket before your insurance kicks in. Higher deductibles mean lower monthly premiums.
    • Also consider whether you're insured for things that are no longer relevant; staying updated is important, such as when you change cars or houses.

  4. Do you really, really need those collectibles instead of an emergency fund?
    Do you really, really need those collectibles instead of an emergency fund?
    Consider selling valuables you no longer want through online classifieds sites. Sites like Craigslist and auction sites like eBay and Trademe can be great ways to get rid of stuff you don't need anymore and to turn it into emergency fund cash.
    • Consider opening an account that is solely meant for direct payments into it from auction and online sales, whether by direct debit from customers or via Paypal.
    • Don't forget the yard or garage sale. These can often be better for large items you're not prepared to ship, like lawnmowers, lounge suites, and bulk clothing.

  5. Get a savings account. Look for the highest yielding interest account you can find that doesn't penalize you for early withdrawal of savings funds. Remember that the purpose of having an emergency fund is liquidity: the ability to use your fund at any time.
    • Online banks often have higher savings rates than ones with shopfronts. Be sure to shop around and if you can take advantage of a bank that is paying you to open an account with them, jump for it.
    • If you have a term deposit, consider breaking it into smaller amounts and staggering their end dates, so that if an emergency arises, you only have to break one of your longer-term investments and only lose interest on that investment and not the others.

  6. Straight from work to savings
    Straight from work to savings
    Set up automatic payments into your savings account. Have a certain amount of each paycheck going into savings. Doing this makes it harder for you to spend the money and you'll feel reticent to reduce it when you know it's earmarked for your emergency fund.
  7. Here's an emergency
    Here's an emergency
    Avoid touching your savings account until you are in a real emergency. This part is important because you need to define what an emergency actually is and is not. An emergency is not that last pair ever of your most favorite shoes on sale nor is it when a friend comes telling you a tale of financial woe. This is about your emergency savings that will protect you, not your wardrobe or your friends. An emergency is:
    • A natural disaster that causes you to have to leave your living arrangements temporarily or permanently
    • Job loss or a massive cut-back in hours
    • A sudden immediate family illness for which you're responsible for meeting payment costs
    • Invasion (war), or civil unrest, especially if you need to vacate or stockpile, and so forth.

  8. Find ways to build your money, not your stress levels
    Find ways to build your money, not your stress levels
    Aim to have a plan for an increasing level of savings in place at all times. After you have developed an emergency fund, work on reducing your sense of fear and worry that you're only a few steps away from destitution. Some of the things you can do include:
    • Deal with your emotional issues around money, especially if you over-spend or hide money from your spouse.
    • Get used to using a budget; this cannot be over-stressed!
    • Do not spend more than what you earn. Having more stuff that causes you to go into debt is a very poor plan for living a fulfilled and worry-free life.
    • Put your savings ahead of your splurging. If you feel a sense of financial deprivation, again you'll need to deal with your emotional issues.


Video


Tips


  • You can use these savings techniques to save for other things such as a down payment on a house.
  • Carefully evaluate the amount of money you will need in your emergency fund by thinking through potential emergency scenarios. For example, someone who owns their own home may have very different emergency fund needs than someone who rents an apartment.
  • While you are advised not to store money in the home, sometimes having a few notes tucked away safely is a wise thing to do in the event that electricity stops working and ATMs don't function, or an emergency alert causes people to empty all ATMs before you reach them. There's nothing funny about being left with no real money during an emergency where people are terrified about having no food, fuel, or communications. Either accept that doing this might end up in the occasional loss of a few hundreds if your house is broken into, or be prepared to run down to the ATM the first whiff of an emergency like a flu epidemic or natural disaster. During an emergency, always have small bills.[2]
  • It may be helpful to establish a credit line with your bank that you have no intention of using unless there is a real emergency.
  • Ways to help you not touch your emergency account include:
    • Be very self-disciplined.
    • Open an account in a bank you don't normally use.
    • Leave the card for the account in a deep dark place at home, to be revealed only when needed; in other words, out of your wallet.
    • Only have an online account for the emergency fund and simply don't open it for any reason – don't learn the password off by heart, etc. (but definitely keep it where you can find it in an emergency).
    • Make a pact with a spouse or partner that the account remains untouched; rely on mutual guilt.
    • Keep some of your emergency fund in junk silver or silver bullion. Silver is liquid enough for an emergency, but requires more consideration to trade or spend than cash or an emergency account.


Warnings


  • Reducing your 401k contributions will usually lead to higher tax obligations. Be sure to be consider these in your planning.
  • You can't afford to not have an emergency fund, even during college years.[3]
  • Don't create an emergency fund at the expense of increasing your credit debt. Put aside what you can afford and do not go into debt even further.
  • Money earned through side-work or moonlighting is taxable income. Know the rules regarding your tax liabilities (including potentially having to pay an amount to your government quarterly) on money earned through such work. Talk to a CPA or other Tax Advisor if you are unsure about the laws where you live.

Things You'll Need


  • Savings account
  • Small bills tucked away for a natural disaster or health scare emergency

Related wikiHows



Sources and Citations


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