$500 to $1,000
Useful for stopping small emergencies from becoming new debt.
Emergency fund
Start with a small buffer, then scale your target based on real risk rather than a one-size-fits-all rule.
Useful for stopping small emergencies from becoming new debt.
A strong next target for renters, students, and early-career workers.
Better for families, freelancers, single-income households, and higher job risk.
Use rent, utilities, groceries, transport, insurance, minimum debt payments, and must-pay costs.
If you have no cash buffer, a small starter emergency fund can prevent the next surprise from becoming more debt. After that, high-interest debt may deserve priority.
Use an account that is safe, separate from everyday spending, and accessible enough for real emergencies. Check deposit insurance rules in your country.
Job loss, urgent medical costs, essential car repairs, housing problems, and necessary travel can qualify. Regular bills and planned purchases should use sinking funds instead.
Use official sources for rules, rights, account safety, taxes, retirement accounts, and country-specific details. Finelo pages are educational and should be checked against current local guidance.