
Personal Finance
4 min read
- By Siddharth Mishra
Anu, 31, Bengaluru, earns Rs. 1.8 lakh/month after tax. Her rent + EMI + essentials = Rs. 95,000. Her "emergency fund" is Rs. 40,000 in a savings account. A two-month gig gap in 2023 wiped it in three weeks. Her recovery took 11 months of cutting everything. The number you sock away before investing matters more than the return on what you invest.
By the end, you will know exactly how many months of expenses you should hold in liquid form. And where to park it so it earns while remaining accessible.
Dual-income household with stable salaried jobs and rented accommodation: 3 months of monthly expenses. Single earner or single-income household: 6 months. Freelancer, consultant, business owner, or anyone with income volatility: 12 months. This is expenses, not income. Rent + EMI + groceries + utilities + school fees + insurance premiums, not discretionary spend.
The liquidity-return trade
Credit cards are not an emergency fund
Emergency fund + job change
Key Takeaways
Read Next
With the emergency fund sorted, the next structural question is household cashflow. The 50/30/20 rule works. Until salary is uneven. Here is the Indian-context version that handles bonus, HRA, and EMI explicitly.
Continue ->