Credit union savings account as primary with excess in a brokerage account.
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Where do you keep your emergency fund?
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In the past I have kept emergency funds in a safe at home and also in a money market account at the same bank that I have my checking account. I was even able to get a debit card for my money market account in the case of an emergency that I also kept in the safe. If you keep your emergency funds in the money market account, it can grow at the same time...even though it won't be all that much.
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I keep $2,000 in my bank savings account (attached to my checking account) and my remaining emergency fund in a separate online savings fund.
You should be able to have quick access to some of your emergency fund just in case you have... well, an emergency. I can switch mine over to checking in seconds. However, the rest of my emergency fund takes ~5 days to access.Current Status: Traveling North American in our 1966 Airstream. Check out the remodel here.
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Originally posted by reedda View PostI'm wondering what is the best place for my $1000 emergency fund...keeping it in my checking accounts is too dangerous for me
Online bank? Local bank? In a safe at home? Under the mattress?
Just curious what others do...thanks!
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What are everyone's thoughts on keeping $1,000 cash at home for your emergency fund?
I know it won't gain interest but it is easy to access. I think of a natural disaster where the power or internet goes out and you can't access your account. Then what do you do?
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High yield savings account online.
If I need immediate funds, I almost always keep a paycheck in my checking to pay my credit card. I always pay my CC off at the end of the cycle, so technically I pay it off a month early every time, so I can afford to use a paycheck in my checking for an emergency if I need to.
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Originally posted by Biffard View PostWhat are everyone's thoughts on keeping $1,000 cash at home for (added: ...PART OF...) your emergency fund?
I know it won't gain interest but it is easy to access. I think of a natural disaster where the power or internet goes out and you can't access your account. Then what do you do?
That said, any amount of cash at home should only really be for extreme, short-notice, immediately pressing emergencies -- thus, you really don't need alot there anyway. In most all other cases, one can use other better (and more secure) means of covering unanticipated expenses. The rest you can keep in savings, CDs, or other accounts.Last edited by kork13; 02-14-2013, 06:32 PM.
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