An emergency fund is the simplest, most boring, most important account you can have. It is what stops one bad month — a job loss, a kitchen fire, a car repair — from becoming a year of crisis.
Rent, groceries, utilities, phone, transit, insurance — the things you would still pay if you lost your job tomorrow.
Three months is a starting goal. Six is a comfortable target. Twelve is for households with one income or unstable work.
Your emergency fund target
$0
Where to keep it
Not in your chequing account — you will spend it. Not in stocks — the market might be down on the day you need it. The right home for an emergency fund is a separate high-interest savings account or a redeemable GIC, at a different bank from your day-to-day chequing. Out of sight, accessible in a day or two.
Why this matters for our families
A lot of immigrant households send money home, support extended family, and carry the weight of being the one with stable income. That makes an emergency fund more important, not less. The fund is what protects everyone behind you from a single bad month.
Start small. Three hundred dollars is better than zero. A thousand dollars is real protection against most small surprises. Build from there.