Why an emergency fund matters

An emergency fund is a buffer of liquid savings dedicated to unexpected expenses: a car repair, a washing machine failure, a period of reduced income. Without one, unexpected costs get paid on a credit card or overdraft, often at punishing interest rates, turning a manageable problem into a debt spiral.

Start smaller than you think

The conventional advice — save three to six months of expenses — is correct as a long-term target but overwhelming as a starting point. Begin with £1,000. That sum handles the vast majority of genuine financial emergencies. Once you have £1,000, the next target becomes one month's essential expenses.

Automate it

The most reliable savings strategy removes the need for willpower. Set up a standing order to transfer a fixed amount to a dedicated easy-access savings account on the day your salary lands — before you have a chance to spend it. Even £50 a month builds to £600 in a year.

What counts as an emergency

Be ruthless about this: an emergency fund is for genuine, unexpected necessities — not a sale you do not want to miss, a holiday upgrade or a predictable annual expense like a car MOT.