Emergency Fund Calculator

An emergency fund is 3–6 months of essential expenses set aside in a liquid, accessible account — your first line of financial defence against job loss, medical crises, or unexpected bills. This calculator finds your exact target in PKR, shows how long it takes to build it at your current savings rate, and tells you where in Pakistan to keep it so it earns above-inflation returns without locking up your money.

Months of Coverage
Salaried (stable): 3–4 months  ·  Self-employed / freelancer: 6 months
Rs 5KRs 20L
Rs 0Rs 5 Cr
Rs 500Rs 10L
0%25%
Money market funds: ~12–17% · Savings account: ~10–13%
Emergency Fund Target
Rs 0
Covered so far 0%
Months to fully funded
Fund Target
Rs 0
6 months of expenses
Still Needed
Rs 0
to reach target
Interest Earned
Rs 0
while building fund
🛡️
Calculating…

Fund Build-Up Over Time

Monthly balance vs target — contributions plus interest

Existing Contributions Target

Fund Composition

Key Numbers

Completion Date
Monthly Needed (to finish in 6 mo)
Total Deposited

Month-by-Month Breakdown

Month Contribution Interest Balance Progress Status

Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund in Pakistan

🏆 Money Market Fund Best Choice

12–17% p.a. · Same-day or next-day redemption · SECP-regulated · No lock-in. Examples: Meezan Cash Fund, NBP Money Market Fund, UBL Liquidity Plus.

🏦 High-Yield Savings Account

10–13% p.a. · Instant access · Zero risk · PDIC insured up to Rs 5 lakh. Good for those who prefer bank-based products, but returns lag money market funds.

📋 National Savings (Regular Income Cert.)

~12–15% p.a. · Monthly profit payouts · Can withdraw with 30-day notice · Government-backed. Acceptable but less liquid than money market funds — withdraw before your emergency becomes urgent.

❌ Avoid: Fixed Deposits & Long-Term Bonds

Premature withdrawal attracts penalties that wipe out gains. An emergency fund must be accessible within 1–2 business days, not 30–90 days. Lock-in defeats the purpose.

How to Use

  1. Set your monthly essential expenses — rent, food, utilities, transport, medicine, and loan repayments only. Exclude discretionary spending.
  2. Choose how many months of coverage you want: 3–4 for stable salaried employees, 6 for self-employed or freelancers.
  3. Enter how much you have already saved toward emergencies and how much you can contribute each month.
  4. Set the fund return rate — money market funds currently pay 12–17% p.a. in Pakistan. Hit Share to save and send your specific numbers.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much emergency fund do I need in Pakistan?
+
The standard rule is 3–6 months of essential expenses. In Pakistan, where job loss, medical bills, and economic shocks are more common, 6 months is the recommended minimum for salaried workers. Self-employed individuals and freelancers should target 9–12 months. Your exact number depends on your monthly essential expenses — use the calculator above to find it in PKR.
Where should I keep my emergency fund in Pakistan?
+
The best option is a money market mutual fund — same-day liquidity, 12–17% annual returns, no lock-in, and SECP regulated. High-yield savings accounts at commercial banks are the second choice (10–13%, instant access). Avoid fixed deposits and NSS Defence Savings Certificates for emergency funds — they have penalties for early withdrawal and can take days to access.
Should my emergency fund be separate from my investments?
+
Yes, always. Emergency funds must be liquid and stable — they should not be in equity funds where a market crash could cut their value by 30–40% exactly when you need the money most. Keep your emergency fund in money market funds or savings accounts, completely separate from your equity/SIP investments and long-term portfolio.
What counts as an essential expense for this calculation?
+
Essential expenses are non-negotiable costs you must cover even without income: rent or mortgage, food and groceries, utilities (electricity, gas, water, internet), transport, health and medicine, and minimum loan repayments. Exclude dining out, subscriptions, entertainment, clothing, and travel. Your emergency fund is built on survival-level spending, not your full lifestyle.
Should I build an emergency fund before investing?
+
Yes — for most people. Without an emergency fund, any unexpected expense forces you to liquidate investments at the wrong time, potentially selling at a loss. The typical sequence: (1) Build 1 month of emergency fund, (2) Pay off high-interest debt, (3) Grow emergency fund to 3–6 months, (4) Then invest aggressively. If you already have investments, you can build the emergency fund and invest simultaneously, but at a minimum keep 1 month's expenses liquid at all times.