
Imagine a 30-year-old
couple with no real savings. Let’s
call them Kurt and Diana. Together, they earn about $8,000 a month, but their household
finances are being squeezed by education debt, rent, and the high cost of
living in an affluent metro area. They have about $300 in the bank between
them, and they just learned they have a baby on the way. Their need to save has
never been greater. How can they do it?
They have
many options for building their fund, more than they first assume. Kurt has an old dirt bike
gathering dust in his dad’s garage, and he is no longer into off-road
motorcycling. Even in its dusty condition, it could easily be sold for more
than $1,500. They each have gym memberships; Kurt drops his and Diana switches
to a cheaper gym, leading to a 12-month savings of $500.
Kurt also explores the possibility of
working weekends or evenings as a barista in addition to his full-time job, a
move that could bring in a couple of thousand dollars in the next few months. The
pair sense they have a federal tax refund coming – and the average I.R.S. refund
for the 2015 tax year was $2,860. They could put some or all of a four-figure
refund toward their emergency fund, rather than toward paying down their
student loans.1
Ideally, Kurt and Diana’s emergency fund
should be $25,000 or more (the equivalent of 3 or more months of living
expenses). No, they are not going to come close to that this year. Or next
year. They have started, though, and it looks as if they will soon have a few
thousand dollars set aside for emergencies. Even having $1,000 could ease many
acute financial pains.
There are numerous
potential ways to boost your emergency fund. Some are simple: save $5 or $10 a week and
deposit it, eat out less, drop those memberships and subscriptions, sell
something, save the money the I.R.S. hands back to you. Some require more ingenuity
and energy: getting a part-time job for supplemental income, renting out a room.
Perhaps the easiest way of all is to
create an automatic transfer of a small portion of your paycheck into a
dedicated emergency savings account each month. Saving will seem painless this
way, and when you pay off a debt, you can direct the money you used each month to
reduce it into your emergency fund instead.
Let us know if we can help.
Mike Mead, EA, CTC
Alliance Financial & Income Tax
807 NW Vesper Street
Blue Springs, MO. 64015
P - 816-220-2001 x201
F - 816-220-2012
AFITOnline.com
Alliance Financial & Income Tax
807 NW Vesper Street
Blue Springs, MO. 64015
P - 816-220-2001 x201
F - 816-220-2012
AFITOnline.com
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