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