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MariP
March 13, 2018
Question

How To Prioritize Emergency Funds, Savings and Paying Off Debt

  • March 13, 2018
  • 39 replies
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We all want to be more responsible with our money. While that sounds great in theory, it can get confusing once you start to break things down. Emergency funds, savings funds and debt all need to be addressed regularly, but trying to figure out a consistent method leaves some paralyzed with indecision.

 

One of the problems that tends to trip people up is prioritization. Allocating your finances to the right place is crucial, but how do you decide how much to put towards any one purpose? How can you cut through the confusion and get your finances on the right track?

Read on for our tips.

 

1.   Save a Mini-Emergency Fund

 

You need to save at least a partial emergency fund first. If you don’t have one and have to face a crisis, you’ll probably need to borrow the money. That means you’ll end up in more debt – whether you owe a family member or a credit card company.

 

A basic emergency fund should be around $1,000. That will cover minor emergencies like new tires after your car has a blowout on the highway, last-minute plane tickets to a funeral, or a brief ER visit.

 

Each time you deplete your emergency fund, halt any other debt-reducing or saving until you build it back up. Once you’re debt free, you can focus on building a more substantial emergency fund, covering between three to six month’s worth of expenses.

 

2.   Refinance Debt

 

Before you start paying off your debt, you should find other ways to reduce it. If you have high-interest credit card debt, do a balance transfer onto an account with a 0% offer. See if you can refinance to get a lower interest rate for your other debt, including car loans, mortgages and student loans.

 

When you refinance, make sure that your new loan doesn’t extend your terms. The longer your loan, the more you’ll pay in interest. You should use the refinance as an opportunity to save money, not spend more of it.

 

After you refinance, keep making the same payments you were previously. Doing so will shorten how quickly you pay off your debt without forcing you to make any changes to your lifestyle.

 

3.   Focus on Saving

 

The general rule of thumb is that you should put between 10-15% of your income towards retirement. While some people advocate for focusing all your efforts on debt payoff, putting money toward retirement now can save you money later.

 

Why? Because saving for retirement is designed to be a long-term approach, and the most important aspect of saving for retirement is time. The more time you spend saving, the more you’ll have – simple as that. That’s why putting a little bit away for 40 years is better than putting a lot away for 20.

 

“A 28 year-old that saves $5,000 a year into a retirement account – if they average 8% and retire at age 68 – should earn approximately $1,295,000,” said CFP Peter Creedon of Crystal Brook Advisors. “To match the $1,295,000, a 40 year old would have to contribute $13,583 a year until retirement if we use the above parameters.”

 

4. Create a Debt Payoff Plan

 

Once you’ve started saving for retirement, you should focus on becoming debt free and creating more money to throw at that debt. There are two ways to do this – lower your living expenses or increase your income.

 

You can increase your income by asking for a raise, finding a new job or starting a side gig. Working an extra 10 hours a week at $10 an hour will yield about $400 a month before taxes.

 

To decrease how much you need to live on, you should find areas of your budget that you can cut. Do you eat out too often or have a yoga studio membership that goes unused? Are you paying too much for car insurance or internet? Take the money that you cut from your budget and apply that to your debt payments.

 

You can pay off your debt with one of two strategies – the snowball or the avalanche method (more on that later this week).

 

Once you’ve paid off your debt, put the money you were spending on monthly payments and beef up your emergency fund. Now you’ll be saving for yourself and your future instead of paying off old debt.

 

Zina Kumok is a freelance writer specializing in personal finance. A former reporter, she has covered murder trials, the Final Four and everything in between. She has been featured in Lifehacker, DailyWorth and Time. Read about how she paid off $28,000 worth of student loans in three years at Debt Free After Three.

39 replies

July 14, 2019
Hi I’m 31, have worked constantly since I was 16 years old. I have never had an emergency fund it seems like a pipe dream to me. I have had to live paycheck to paycheck every day of my adult life. The one time I did actually have decent credit, tragedies happened and forced me to use my credit cards to provide for my family. Now I am riddled with crushing debt, barely scraping by every month(coin star king). Oh on top of that I was let go from 2 jobs in 1 month and was late on rent. Now my family has received our final eviction notice and have 48 hours before the sheriffs will throw us out in the street. There is no emergency fund.
September 12, 2019

 Can closed accounts be removed 

September 28, 2019

Does anybody have a recommendation on a good debt consolidation company that will gather up $10,000 in debt and allow me to make one monthly payment for it all? Any comments appreciate.

December 31, 2019

 I'm currently using Freedom Debt Relief for my credit cards. 

April 9, 2020

How is that company

October 5, 2019

I have found the best way to save is do set up an auto save type account. Like a roll-up. Fir example if I spend $25.67 it auto-rolls up my debit card payment to $27 - and puts the $0.33 in an account.  There are multiple apps that can help with these. Stash, Acords, Robinhood (I use all three)

There are also apps for rainy day fund and student loan (Chipper and Digit) payoffs that roll-up too.  It’s minor amount each transaction. But over this year I’ve saved/invested nearly $11k in rollover funds. I say invested because some use your roll-over money to invest in small amounts of stocks - which can also help by paying off dividends. 
fir example I have 1 share of KO (Coca-cola) in Robinhood app. Last time I got a payment back of 1.06 in dividend ‘free’ money - the. I reinvest. 
just ideas that with four ideas that work for me. 
Kirk 

October 14, 2019

I started a savings account through the company’s preferred bank I put30.00 in it

monthly

i never use it and into second year I have 600.00 for an emergency fund 

November 7, 2019

Good info in general👍

Just a few thoughts/hindsight from content I have gathered, in Podcasts/Books including (JL Collins/Ramit Sethi/Choose Fi/Dave Ramsey/The mad Fi-entist/The money guy show/Chris Hogan/John C. Bogle) Who all have fantastic and unique angles on personal finance/investing.

1.   Save a Mini-Emergency Fund

Absolutely a cornerstone.Not one of the experts stated above will disagree.As Uncle Dave would put it "it keeps murphy from knocking on the door". It was also in my case, the spark/challenge for me to actually "save" and alter my professional spending lifestyle.I worked to play,and burn up every paycheck on the next venture.Believe me there were a lot of bogus things that I just couldn't live without!!

EMERGENCIES ONLY!! I know that your favorite band is important too and need some support..Draw the line in the sand...

During this time, I also took the plunge to add up my total debt/net worth..Yikes.Needless to say,I also added up how much I paid in interest on "dumb debt"..And a spark turned into a small flame.No more!

Step 1 is a fantastic time to see where your at, good or bad..gather up every bill/cost/debt/headache.Bring it out of the darkness and lay it out.GET A PLAN to escape..Don't be like me,and wait until its a code red emergency!😥

 

2.   Refinance Debt

Ehhh..Sure.True,putting a bunch of small bags of debt into one big bag of debt,makes you less prone to forget or lose a debt bag along the way...Again True, a lower interest rate takes off a little weight on the consolidated ruck sack of debt.Nonetheless, you still have a bag of debt on your back.I targeted the "heaviest" little bags I could find..and made sure those left my bag first.The biggest takeaway I got from all this..I'm tired of packing a bunch of bogus weight on my back!

Now here's where the line gets drawn in the sand with #2...

"After you refinance, keep making the same payments you were previously. Doing so will shorten how quickly you pay off your debt without forcing you to make any changes to your lifestyle."

If your big and strong and you like packing heavy things around..Fantastic..But as you grow older..Its not all that fun anymore.This is the key time to alter your spending lifestyle and really question/challenge what is essential or not.

 

3.   Focus on Saving

All great things here..Dave Ramsey is big on 15%. savings..The FIRE guys are big on "as much as you can" so you can retire early.JL collins is "keep it simple" Ramit the same..John Bogle has forever changed and has been a blessing for us "average joes" with index funds.But my problem was..I owed everyone and their dog money plus interest.How can I invest!!?? Well if I could have invested what I paid in interest over the years into a Roth IRA...Sure would have been nice..😓Quit paying banks! Pay them off first.If you have a 16% interest credit card..Pay it off.Its a guaranteed ROI of 16% on your hard earned after taxes dollars that year with no capitol gains.Think about that one👍 Get your people paid off before you jump in head over heels investing.However if you company has a vested match...DO NOT leave money on the table.Although i'm not 100% out of debt..I will do whatever it takes to leave no "free money" on table. 4. Create a Debt Payoff Plan

I feel like this should be step #1..A PLAN! You cannot build/create or really do much without a plan.With a basic financial plan..Spending/Cutting costs/extra income are no brainers.. The debt snowball/avalanche is just a preference on how you would like to attack debt and win one cut at a time. How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.This was also a fun time for me personally to listen to the various experts strategy's and decide what fit me best.

 

I am by no means a finance expert nor am I giving financial advise.I just started paying attention to the mud hole I was about to slide in. Sparks turn into flame,that turn into a large fire.Take control of your future! YOU are in control of more then you think..It took me too long to figure this out! Good luck👍

December 18, 2019

Fabulous article, because it offers realistic advice. So many articles on this topic make you feel bad about yourself and offer suggestions that are highly impractical. This    piece reads like real-world advice from a non-judge mental friend. Thank you! 

December 19, 2019

This is all great info. I do something similar but my savings for retirement and my emergency fun are one. I have 2000$ a month in bills, so when I get paid weekly, I apply whatever is needed that week to get my bill money back to 2000 and I put the rest in savings. Works really well for me. As for paying down cards I wish I could consolidate to lower interest but I am sort of stuck with them for the time being. So I pay off cards in the order of the lowest balance. Making double payments to those and paying the minimum + 15 to the rest. I have a little ways to go but baby steps are getting me there.

December 19, 2019

The reason so many people live paycheck to paycheck is because we typically adjust our spending to our income.  Make a little more - eat out a little more, get the better cable tv plan, a little nicer phone, a little nicer apartment, a little nicer car, whatever. Income is just like a house...no matter how big it is, we expand to fill it. Just a thought as I read some of the replies. 

December 20, 2019

So true! 

January 10, 2020

If I can make more money in the market than I'm paying as an interest rate on a loan (i.e., mortgage or car), isn't that a better use of the money than keeping money out of the market to pay off the debts?

January 28, 2020

@mk617  if you are making money in the (stock) market, when you access this money to pay down debt this will cause a tax liability, probably. Which means you will be paying tax on this money (again) and to pay down debt this way is not optimal.  I would advise leaving your invested money alone and not invest anymore (if you are) and use it instead to pay off debt.

 

It is preferable to increase income or cut expenses in order to pay off debt.

January 31, 2020

I want to save at least 10% of my monthly income for emergency funds, but sometimes it is difficult when my hours are cut... What can I do in these cases?