Feeling Overwhelmed By Saving? A CFP’s 3-Step Emergency Fund Plan

Feeling Overwhelmed By Saving? A CFP’s 3-Step Emergency Fund Plan


Building an emergency fund sounds simple, but it’s not always easy. The idea of saving three to six months’ worth of essential living expenses can feel overwhelming — and for many people, it’s just not realistic.

That’s why we suggest starting small, as long as you start. In the words of Cary Carbonaro, a certified financial planner and managing advisor at Ashton Thomas Private Wealth, an emergency fund is both “a goal and a discipline.” It takes commitment and consistency, but it doesn’t have to feel intimidating. Here’s her three-step plan to building up your emergency fund savings.

Use separate banks for checking and savings

Your first step in building up your savings is to create a barrier between your checking and savings accounts. By banking at separate institutions, you remove easy access to your savings. And if your savings account comes with an ATM card as some do, make sure to unlink it.

Putting your emergency fund in a totally separate bank is a small hack because it creates a psychological barrier, helping you treat the money as off-limits unless you truly need it. The idea is that while you want your savings to be accessible, you don’t want it to be too accessible.

If you have both your checking and savings accounts under the same umbrella, use this as an opportunity to score a welcome bonus for opening a new savings account. With the BMO Savings Builder account, for the first year, new account holders can get an extra $5 every month they save $200 or more — totaling up to $60 in one year. Not only is this free cash, but it encourages you to consistently save. You can make this even more doable if you allocate each week to saving $50, making it $200 over the course of four weeks, or one month.

BMO Savings Builder account

BMO Bank is a Member FDIC.

  • Annual Percentage Yield (APY)

  • Minimum balance

  • Monthly fee

  • Maximum transactions

  • Overdraft fees

    Not applicable to savings account

  • Offer checking account?

Pros

  • Low minimum balance
  • No monthly fee
  • No transaction limits
  • No overdraft fees
  • Offers a checking account as well

Automate your savings

z

Reroute costs to savings

Goodbudget

  • Cost

    Free for 20 total envelopes; $10/month (or $80/year) for unlimited envelopes

  • Standout features

    Allows couples to use the envelope system digitally for budgeting, and allows couples to track their debt

  • Categorizes your expenses

    Yes, but users must manually input transactions since the app does not sync to your bank account

  • Links to accounts

    No, users must manually input purchases and transactions

  • Availability

    Offered in both the App Store (for iOS) and on Google Play (for Android) and as a version for laptops

  • Security features

    Information is using bank-grade 256-bit SSL

Pros

  • Free version of the app available
  • Ability to share budget and spending with your partner
  • Digital envelopes help couples save for big goals that matter to them
  • Money management courses and resources available

Cons

  • Transactions must be entered manually

Monarch

  • Cost

    $8.33/month (billed $99.99 annually); $14.99/month (billed monthly) – get 50% off your first year with code CNBC50

  • Free trial

    7-day free trial is available before subscribing

  • Standout features

    Net worth tracker, investment portfolio tracking, goal creation and progress tracking, budgeting and expense tracking

  • Categorizes your expenses

    Yes, but users can modify

  • Links to accounts

    Yes, bank and credit cards, as well as IRAs, 401(k)s, mortgages and loans

  • Availability

    Offered in both the App Store (for iOS) and on Google Play (for Android); web version also offered

  • Security features

    Utilizes industry-leading security practices, according to Monarch’s website

Pros

  • Easy-to-navigate money-tracking dashboard, including a net-worth tracker
  • Easily syncs to your bank, credit cards and other financial accounts
  • Users can add collaborators for free
  • Seven-day free trial

Cons

  • Subscription is pricier than competitors
  • Recommendations in the “advice” tab are generic

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