🛟 Emergency Fund Calculator for £1,000/mo Expenses
How much should you have saved for emergencies? Find out.
Quick answer
With £1,000 of essential monthly expenses, aim for an emergency fund of around £3,000 (3 months) to £6,000 (6 months).
- 3 months: £3,000
- 6 months: £6,000
- Save £100/mo: 30 months to 3mo buffer
- Save £250/mo: 12 months to 3mo buffer
In detail: Emergency Fund Calculator for £1,000/mo Expenses
With £1,000 in essential monthly outgoings — rent/mortgage, utilities, groceries, transport, minimum debt payments, and nothing else — a 3-month cushion of £3,000 is the recognised minimum, and 6 months (£6,000) is the comfortable target. The gap exists because 3 months covers most short redundancies while 6 months covers prolonged illness or a slower job market.
At this outgoing level, building the fund is genuinely achievable in a year or two on most incomes. Keep it in an instant-access savings account with a competitive rate (currently 4–5% for top accounts) so it earns something without being locked up.
Don't confuse emergency savings with holiday or car-replacement savings — those are "sinking funds" and belong in separate pots. The emergency fund exists specifically for income interruption or a genuinely unplanned major expense (boiler failure, urgent dental work, sudden relocation).
What this tool helps with
Your emergency fund target and progress
What you can enter
- Monthly essential expenses (£): 1800
- Target months of cover: 3 months (minimum)
Why this page is useful
How much should you have saved for emergencies? Find out. This page loads fast, gives a direct answer, and then expands with useful context instead of burying the result under filler.