An emergency fund is the foundation of financial security. Here's a realistic, step-by-step plan to build 3 months of expenses on a typical UK salary.
Overview
Step 1: Calculate Your Monthly Essential Expenses
Step 2: Set a Realistic Timeline
Step 3: Automate It on Payday
Step 4: Choose the Right Account
Step 5: Build It in Stages
Step 6: Find Money You Didn't Know You Had
Step 7: Protect It (Define What Counts as an Emergency)
What If You're on a Low Income?
When Is Your Emergency Fund 'Done'?
Start Today, Not Monday
How much should a 3-month emergency fund be in the UK?+
It depends on your essential monthly expenses. For a single person, this is typically £3,600–£5,400. For a family, £6,000–£10,500. Calculate by adding up rent/mortgage, bills, food, transport, and minimum debt payments, then multiply by three.
Where should I keep my emergency fund?+
In an easy-access savings account or easy-access Cash ISA. You need to be able to access the money quickly without penalties. Avoid fixed-term accounts, notice accounts, or investments. The best easy-access rates in March 2026 are around 4.5% AER.
How long does it take to build an emergency fund?+
On a median UK salary, saving £200/month towards a £4,500 target takes about 22 months. Saving £300/month takes 15 months. The key is consistency — a sustainable monthly amount you maintain over time beats aggressive saving you abandon after two months.
Start Your Savings Journey Today
20+ savings challenges, daily tracking, and achievement badges -- all free.
Download on the App Store