Emergency Fund for Single Renter: $2,500/Month Expenses
Single person renting, moderate job stability. How much you need in emergency savings and how long it takes to build, based on $2,500/month in essential expenses.
Recommended Emergency Fund (6 months)
$15,000
$2,500/mo à 6 months = $15,000
Emergency Fund by Coverage Level
3 Months
$7,500
6 Months
$15,000
Recommended
9 Months
$22,500
12 Months
$30,000
How Long to Build Your Emergency Fund
| Saving/Month | 3 Months | 6 Months | 9 Months | 12 Months |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $200/mo | 38 mo | 75 mo | 113 mo | 150 mo |
| $500/mo | 15 mo | 30 mo | 45 mo | 60 mo |
| $750/mo | 10 mo | 20 mo | 30 mo | 40 mo |
| $1,000/mo | 8 mo | 15 mo | 23 mo | 30 mo |
| $1,500/mo | 5 mo | 10 mo | 15 mo | 20 mo |
| $2,000/mo | 4 mo | 8 mo | 12 mo | 15 mo |
Why You Need $15,000 in Emergency Savings
With $2,500 in monthly expenses, 6 months of coverage gives you $15,000 â enough to handle job loss, medical emergencies, major car or home repairs, or unexpected family needs without relying on high-interest debt.
Keep your emergency fund in a high-yield savings account (currently ~4.5% APY) for easy access while earning interest. At that rate, $15,000 earns about $56/month in interest alone.
Once your emergency fund is fully funded, redirect that savings toward investing. See our FIRE calculator or compound interest calculator to plan your next steps.
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Single Homeowner (6 mo)Family (Dual Income) (3 mo)Family (Single Income) (9 mo)Self-Employed (12 mo)Freelancer/Contractor (9 mo)