Priyansh was earning a healthy pay check, owned a luxurious home, a car parked at his door, eating out in good restaurants ? life could not have been better. As luck would have it, the economy took a downturn and he was laid off. He also had to face huge losses in the stock market. To add to his misery, Priyansh?s father had to be hospitalised and the expenses for his medical treatments were exorbitant. His happy family picture vanished in no time! The EMIs started becoming a burden and soon he started defaulting payments.

Why did a well educated man earning so well face such a situation? Some reasons ? a lavish lifestyle with little emphasis on savings, lack of insurance, incorrect investments and most important reason was that Priyansh had not kept aside an emergency fund.

As the name suggests, an emergency fund is money that can be used in cases of financial emergencies. Unexpected expenses can take a toll on your financial health ? it could be a single large expense like a sudden illness or loss of job or it could be consistent little things that add up over time such as a broken pipeline expenses, car repair expenses etc. An emergency fund can be used to meet the unexpected expenses without digging into long term savings.

How much should you invest in an emergency fund?

The emergency fund size depends on your lifestyle, ability to save, your stage in life and your financial obligations. For a bachelor with no obligations, the purpose of an emergency fund would be pretty simple like taking care of living expenses if he is out of job . Hence the fund could be about living expenses for a period of six months, including obligations. On the other hand, if a person has a family to support, his emergency fund should take care of his living expenses as well as the financial obligations for six months.

It is also a good idea to have a component for medical expenses in your emergency fund in case of accidents or sudden hospitalisation, in case your company does not provide health insurance and you have not purchased one.

You need not transfer a lump sum into the emergency fund account. Small but consistent deposits will not put pressure on your current spending and also build a reasonable fund over a period of time. If you think you do not have extra funds, find ways of cutting expenses and divert these funds into an emergency fund.

Wedding expenses, retirement savings, children education expenses are not a part of an emergency fund obligation. Your long-term savings should take care of these planned expenses.

Where should you keep it?

You should be able to instantly withdraw money from your emergency fund. At the same time, keeping the money idle is not practical ? even your emergency fund money should grow! However, invest in a completely safe avenue ? even if it earns lower returns. Remember the primary objective of the fund is to protect you on a rainy day.

A savings account is the best place to keep your emergency fund. People had money piled up in their homes in the good old days. With 24 hour ATMs this is not necessary. Most savings accounts have the auto sweep facility between savings and fixed deposits. Invest in such a savings account as you will earn a better interest rate than a mere savings account.

Short-term deposits are also a good investment avenue for an emergency fund.

Gold also is a traditional form of emergency fund. Buy 24 karat gold coins especially to meet emergency cash needs.

A credit card can also be used as an emergency fund, although use it only if it is your last option. Never use your credit card limit as an emergency fallback if you do not have the money to repay the credit card bill. The interest rates are overbearing. So, unless you have some money coming up surely, like a FD maturing, do not even consider a credit limit for an emergency expense.