Before you invest. Before you pay off debt. Before you open a Roth IRA or buy your first stock — you need $1,000 sitting somewhere untouched.
That’s it. That’s the first goal.
It sounds almost too simple. But that one number — $1,000 in an emergency fund — changes everything about how you interact with money. And most people in our community have never had it.
Why $1,000 Changes Everything
Without an emergency fund, every unexpected expense becomes a crisis. Your car breaks down — you put it on a credit card. Your child gets sick — you borrow from a family member. Your hours get cut at work — you fall behind on rent.
These aren’t just stressful moments. They’re wealth destroyers. Every time an emergency sends you to a credit card or a payday loan, you’re paying interest that makes it harder to get ahead. You’re stuck in a cycle where every step forward gets pulled back by the next unexpected expense.
A $1,000 emergency fund breaks that cycle. Not completely — but enough to handle most of life’s common emergencies without going into debt.
How to Get There Even When Money Feels Tight
Here’s the truth — $1,000 feels like a lot when you’re living paycheck to paycheck. But broken down, it’s more achievable than you think.
$1,000 in 12 months = $84 a month = $19 a week.
That’s less than a streaming service, a few coffees, or one dinner out. The money is usually there — it just needs to be redirected.
Here are a few ways to find it:
Sell something. Most of us have items sitting around worth $50–$200. Electronics, clothes, furniture — sell them and put every dollar straight into your emergency fund.
Cut one expense for 90 days. Pick one non-essential and eliminate it temporarily. Put that money aside automatically every month.
Use your tax refund. If you receive a tax refund and don’t have an emergency fund, that refund should go straight there before anything else.
Pick up one extra shift or side gig. Even one extra shift a month at your current job, or a few hours of freelance work, can get you to $1,000 faster than you think.
Where to Keep It
Your emergency fund should be: Accessible — you need to be able to get to it quickly in a real emergency Separate — keep it in a different account from your everyday spending so you’re not tempted to dip into it Not invested — this money should not be in the stock market. It needs to be stable and available.
A high-yield savings account is ideal. You’ll earn a little interest while keeping the money safe and accessible.
What Comes After $1,000
Once you hit $1,000 keep going. Financial experts recommend building your emergency fund to 3–6 months of living expenses over time. But $1,000 is the foundation. It’s the number that changes your relationship with money and gives you the breathing room to start building.
Start there. Just $1,000. Everything else comes after.

