📚 Financial Education Library › Article #10
Published: 2026-06-21 · By Bhanuprakash Sardesai
10. Building an Emergency Fund: The First Step of Investing
The first rupee of investing doesn't go into a fund — it goes into an emergency fund. This is the liquid buffer that stands between you and a forced sale of long-term investments when life goes sideways: a job loss, a hospital bill, a sudden repair. Skip this step and every other financial plan becomes fragile.
How much should you save? The standard recommendation is 6 to 12 months of essential living expenses. If your monthly expenses are ₹40,000, aim for an emergency fund of ₹2.4 lakh to ₹4.8 lakh. For single-income households, those with dependents, or people in unstable industries, lean toward 12 months.
Where should you keep your emergency fund? The money must be liquid (accessible within 24-48 hours), safe (no risk of capital loss), and earning some return to offset inflation. Good options include: a separate savings account, liquid mutual funds, or a combination of fixed deposits and sweep-in accounts.
A common question is whether to invest the emergency fund for better returns. The answer is a firm no. The purpose of an emergency fund isn't returns – it's insurance. Once your emergency fund is fully established, direct all additional savings toward your growth investments. Use our SIP Calculator to plan your investments after your emergency fund is in place.
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