Savings
The standard advice is to save six months of expenses before you can call it an "emergency fund." For a lot of people living paycheck to paycheck, that number is so large it stops feeling like a plan and starts feeling like a reason to not start at all.
Here's a more useful way to think about it.
The real job of an emergency fund
It isn't to make you rich or beat inflation. Its only job is to stop a bike repair, a medical bill, or a month without freelance income from turning into a personal loan at 14-24% interest. Judged by that standard, even a small fund changes your options completely.
₹20,000-25,000 is usually enough to absorb a genuine surprise expense without borrowing. That is a realistic first target, not six months of expenses.
Where to actually keep it
The fund fails at its one job if it's hard to access quickly, or if it's sitting somewhere that moves in value. That rules out the stock market, mutual funds, and anything with a lock-in.
- A separate savings account at a different bank than your main one. The friction of it not being one tap away in your usual app is a feature, not a bug. It keeps you from dipping in for non-emergencies.
- A sweep-in FD linked to a savings account. Many banks let you set this up so the money still earns FD-level interest but can be withdrawn instantly if needed.
- A liquid mutual fund, once you're past the first ₹20,000-30,000 and want something that earns slightly more while still being accessible within a day.
Avoid anything with a lock-in, a penalty for early withdrawal, or exposure to market swings for this specific pot of money. That's what the rest of your savings and investments are for.
Building it when there's not much left over each month
If your salary already feels fully spoken for, the fund gets built through small, boring redirections rather than one dramatic budget overhaul:
- Automate a fixed amount on payday, even if it's ₹500-1,000. Money moved before you see it in your spending account rarely gets missed.
- Redirect windfalls first. A bonus, a tax refund, cashback, a gift. Before it blends into regular spending, move a portion straight into the fund.
- Round up, don't overhaul. Cutting one recurring subscription or reducing one delivery-app habit by half is more sustainable than an ambitious diet-style budget you'll abandon in three weeks.
- Treat the first ₹20,000 as non-negotiable, then relax the pace. The first tranche matters most because it closes off the most common emergencies. After that, building toward one, then three, then six months of expenses can happen at a slower, steadier rate.
What counts as "using" the fund
Worth deciding this in advance, while you're calm, rather than in the moment. A genuine emergency is unplanned, necessary, and time-sensitive: a medical bill, an urgent repair, an income gap. A flash sale is not an emergency, no matter how good the discount looks at 11 p.m.
If you do dip into it, the next payday's automation resumes exactly as before. The fund isn't a one-time project. It's a habit that occasionally gets spent down and rebuilt.
The takeaway
Six months of expenses is a good long-term target, not a starting line. Aim for a first ₹15,000-20,000 in an account that's separate but reachable, automate small contributions so the decision isn't made fresh every month, and let the target grow once the most common emergencies stop being a threat.
This article is educational and not personalised financial advice. Specific interest rates and product features vary by bank, so compare current offers before opening any account.