How Much Emergency Fund Do Homeowners Need?
Homeownership adds surprise costs. A strong emergency fund is less about “3 months” and more about runway under stress + a repair buffer.
The two-bucket approach (simple and effective)
- Runway: months you can cover your burn rate when income drops or expenses spike.
- Repair buffer: money reserved for home-specific surprises (deductible, HVAC, roof, plumbing).
The mistake most homeowners make is mixing these together. A single HVAC repair can wipe out “3 months of savings,” leaving you exposed to job loss or other emergencies.
Why a homeowner fund needs to be bigger than a renter fund
- Insurance deductibles can be large and immediate.
- Property taxes and insurance premiums can rise unpredictably.
- Repairs don’t wait for your budget cycle.
- Even “minor” issues can become expensive if delayed.
How to size runway (the practical method)
- Use the tool to create a stress scenario (income drop + expense spike).
- Look at stress margin (how much you burn each month).
- Set savings until runway hits your target (often 6+ months depending on stability).
How to size the repair buffer
Your repair buffer is separate from runway. A simple starting point is:
- Insurance deductible (the amount you’d pay out of pocket)
- Plus a “common repair” amount (HVAC/plumbing/electrical)
- Or a percentage of home value if you want a conservative model
Common mistakes
- Counting retirement accounts as “emergency money” (slow/penalties).
- Only planning for a single problem (job loss OR repairs, not both).
- Ignoring escrow shock (taxes/insurance can rise quickly).
- Assuming income is stable (many careers have variable periods).
Next: read the full affordability guide here, or simulate rate hikes. Ready to size your buffer? Run the tool.