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How to Create an Emergency Fund in India and the Best Places to Keep It

A complete guide to building your financial safety net, how much to save, where to keep it, and what to avoid.

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Revati Krishna
Published: 8 Jun 2026, 12:00 AM IST (3 days ago)
Last Updated: 8 Jun 2026, 11:49 AM IST (2 days ago)
6 min read
Quick Answer

An emergency fund is 3–6 months of living expenses set aside in instantly accessible, low-risk instruments. In India, liquid mutual funds, high-yield savings accounts, and FDs are the most commonly used options, each balancing returns (6–7.5% p.a.) against withdrawal speed (instant to T+1 business day).

Over 70% of Indian households have less than one month of savings as a financial buffer. A single unexpected event, like a job loss, hospitalization, or a car breakdown, can unravel months of financial progress with no safety net in place.

An emergency fund is that safety net. A deliberate, structured buffer built for one purpose: absorbing life's unpredictability without breaking long-term investments or going into debt.

What Is an Emergency Fund?

A pool of money set aside exclusively for genuine, unexpected financial emergencies is called an emergency fund.

Without one, a single emergency forces a chain of bad choices: selling equity at the wrong time, breaking FDs with penalties, or borrowing at 36–48% annual interest on credit cards, and more.

How Much Should An Emergency Fund Be?

The ideal number is 3 to 6 months of your monthly expenses, not income. Expenses are what actually need covering if income stops.

Profile Target
Salaried, stable sector (IT, PSU, banking) 3 months
Salaried, volatile sector (startup, sales, media) 6 months
Self-employed / freelancer 6–9 months
Single-income household 6 months
Dual-income household 3 months
Household with dependents + active EMIs 6+ months

Quick Calculator

Monthly Expenses 3-Month Target 6-Month Target
₹15,000 ₹45,000 ₹90,000
₹25,000 ₹75,000 ₹1,50,000
₹40,000 ₹1,20,000 ₹2,40,000
₹60,000 ₹1,80,000 ₹3,60,000
₹1,00,000 ₹3,00,000 ₹6,00,000

Important: Include all EMIs in your monthly expenses because lenders do not pause them during a job loss.

How to Build It: 5 Steps

  1. Calculate real monthly expenses — go through 3 months of bank statements. Include rent/EMI, groceries, utilities, transport, and insurance. Exclude OTT, dining out, and the gym.
  2. Set milestone targets — start with a ₹25,000–₹30,000 mini buffer, then build to 3 months, then 6.
  3. Open a separate dedicated account — keeping it in the same account as daily spending guarantees it quietly disappears.
  4. Automate on salary day — set a standing instruction to transfer a fixed amount (₹2,000–₹5,000) before any discretionary spending. Month-end savings are unreliable.
  5. Replenish after every use — rebuilding the fund immediately after an emergency is as important as building it in the first place.

Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund in India

Two non-negotiable criteria: high liquidity (accessible within  hours, or 1–3 business days) and capital safety. Returns matter but come third.

Option Returns (2026) Liquidity Capital Safety Best For
Liquid mutual fund 6.5–7.5% p.a. Instant up to ₹50K / T+1 Very high (AAA-rated) Bulk of the fund (₹50K+)
FD with premature withdrawal 6.5–7.5% (minus penalty) Same-day via net banking DICGC insured up to ₹5L Capital-guarantee seekers
Overnight fund 5.5–6.5% p.a. T+1 Extremely high (daily rollover) Large sums, ultra-conservative
Regular savings account 2.5–3.5% p.a. Instant DICGC insured Not ideal — negative real returns

FD vs Liquid Fund: Which Wins?

Factor Liquid Fund Fixed Deposit
Returns 6.5–7.5% (floating) 6.5–7.5% (locked)
Exit penalty ≤0.007% within first 6 days; zero after 0.5–1% rate reduction on early exit
Capital guarantee No (but effectively stable) Yes — DICGC insured
Best for Balances above ₹1 lakh, held 1+ weeks First-time investors; simplicity seekers

A practical split used by many experienced investors: ₹50,000–₹1 lakh in a high-yield SFB savings account (instant access), and the rest in a liquid fund or FD ladder.

What NOT to Use as an Emergency Fund

  • Equity mutual funds — markets often fall exactly when personal crises hit. Selling at a loss defeats the purpose.
  • PPF — 15-year lock-in; partial withdrawal only from year 7.
  • NPS — pre-retirement withdrawals are heavily restricted by design.
  • Gold — volatile, not instant to liquidate, and prices fall in economic stress.

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