Everyone tells you to build an emergency fund. Almost nobody tells you exactly how much to save, for your specific life, in your specific city, earning your specific income.
This guide gives you a clear formula to calculate your personal emergency fund target — not a generic number pulled from the air.
What Is an Emergency Fund Calculator?
An emergency fund calculator helps you determine exactly how much money to keep as a financial safety net. It multiplies your essential monthly expenses (not your full salary or total spending) by 3 to 6 months, depending on your job stability, dependents, and financial commitments. The result is your personal emergency fund target.
The Formula: Simple, Specific, Effective
Emergency Fund Target = Essential Monthly Expenses x Number of Months
The keyword is essential. Not your total monthly spending. Only the expenses that would continue even in a financial crisis.
Step 1: Calculate Your Essential Monthly Expenses
Go through your last 3 bank statements and identify only these categories:
| Expense Category | Example Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Rent or home loan EMI | ₹8,000 |
| Groceries and household items | ₹4,000 |
| Electricity, water, internet | ₹1,500 |
| Mobile bill | ₹300 |
| Commute or fuel | ₹1,200 |
| Medical/medicines (regular) | ₹500 |
| Any other loan EMIs | ₹2,000 |
| Total | ₹17,500 |
Do not include: dining out, OTT subscriptions, clothing, gym memberships, weekend trips, or discretionary shopping. These can be paused in a crisis.
Step 2: Choose Your Multiplier
Three months of expenses is the minimum. Six months is the standard recommendation. Here’s how to decide which applies to you:
Go with 3 months if:
- You have a stable government or MNC job
- You have no dependants
- You have health insurance covering major medical costs
- Your skills are in high demand and you could find work quickly
Go with 6 months if:
- You work in a startup, small business, or contractual role
- You are the sole earner in your family
- You have significant EMIs or financial obligations
- Your industry is cyclical or your job security is uncertain
Most young salaried professionals in India fall somewhere in the middle. A 4 to 5 month target is often the most practical starting point.
Emergency Fund Targets by Income Level
Here’s a quick reference based on typical essential expense levels across different income brackets:
| Monthly Salary | Estimated Essentials | 3-Month Target | 6-Month Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| ₹20,000 | ₹12,000 | ₹36,000 | ₹72,000 |
| ₹30,000 | ₹17,000 | ₹51,000 | ₹1,02,000 |
| ₹40,000 | ₹22,000 | ₹66,000 | ₹1,32,000 |
| ₹60,000 | ₹30,000 | ₹90,000 | ₹1,80,000 |
These are estimates. Your actual number depends on your city, lifestyle, and obligations. The formula is always more reliable than any generic figure.
How Long Will It Take to Build Your Fund?
Once you have your target, divide it by the monthly amount you can set aside:
Months to Goal = Emergency Fund Target / Monthly Savings Toward Fund
If your target is ₹75,000 and you can save ₹3,000 per month toward it, you’ll reach your goal in 25 months — just over 2 years.
To reach it faster, temporarily redirect money from discretionary spending: reduce dining out, pause an OTT subscription, skip unnecessary purchases. Once funded, those amounts go straight into your SIP.
Does Your Emergency Fund Need to Grow Over Time?
Yes. As your income and lifestyle evolve, so do your essential expenses. A good habit is reviewing your emergency fund target once a year — typically after an appraisal or salary increase.
If your monthly essentials have gone from ₹17,000 to ₹22,000, your 6-month target has jumped from ₹1,02,000 to ₹1,32,000. Top it up accordingly, then return to investing.
One Number Worth Knowing
According to SEBI’s Investor Survey on Financial Literacy, individuals who maintain an adequate financial buffer are significantly less likely to make panic-driven investment decisions — such as redeeming mutual funds during a market correction — compared to those without any liquidity reserve. The emergency fund doesn’t just protect your bank balance. It protects your investment behaviour.
This finding is backed by global research, too. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) has documented that households with liquid savings buffers are far less likely to experience financial distress following income shocks — a pattern that holds across both developed and emerging economies.
Conclusion
Your emergency fund target isn’t a random number. It’s a calculation based on your actual life. Take 20 minutes this weekend, go through your bank statements, identify your essentials, and multiply by 4 or 5. That’s your number. If you’re just starting your financial journey, you can also read our guide on how a 25-year-old earning ₹30K a month should start investing for long-term growth.
Write it somewhere you’ll see it. Set up an automatic monthly transfer toward it. And know that every rupee you add is quietly buying you something priceless: the ability to face a crisis without panic.




