---
title: "Emergency Fund Statistics 2026: How Much Americans Have Saved (and How Much They Should)"
date: 2026-05-19
author: "Steven Burnett"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/emergency-fund-statistics.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Finance"
    url: "/finance.md"
tags:
  - name: "Statistics"
    url: "/tag/statistics.md"
---

# Emergency Fund Statistics 2026: How Much Americans Have Saved (and How Much They Should)

Just **47%** of U.S. adults indicate they have sufficient liquidity to cover a **$1,000** emergency expense, according to Bankrate’s latest Emergency Savings Report. The Federal Reserve’s SHED reading puts the smaller-shock measure at **63%** of adults able to cover a **$400** emergency expense with cash or its equivalent, unchanged from 2022 and 2023.

Headline survey numbers vary across publishers, yet the underlying pattern holds across every primary source tracked here. The data points to a household balance sheet that thinned through three years of elevated prices, with younger adults and lower-income households absorbing most of the strain.

## Key Takeaways

- **47%** of Americans indicate sufficient liquidity to cover a **$1,000** emergency expense, per Bankrate’s latest reading.
- **63%** of adults can pay a **$400** emergency expense with cash or its equivalent, unchanged from 2022 and 2023.
- **24%** of Americans have no emergency savings at all, with **34%** of Gen Zers and **16%** of baby boomers in that group.
- **55%** of adults have three months of expenses set aside in a rainy-day fund, down from a high of **59%** in 2021.
- **60%** of Americans are uncomfortable with their level of emergency savings per Bankrate’s May 2025 reading.
- **54%** are saving less due to [inflation](https://coinlaw.io/inflation-statistics/), with consumer prices **26%** higher than they were in December 2019.
- The FDIC national savings rate of **0.38%** sits under the **4.39%** national rate cap.

## Editor’s Choice

- Average annual expenditures for all consumer units in 2024 were **$78,535**. A three-month buffer at that level equals roughly **$19,634**.
- **13%** of all adults said they would be unable to pay a **$400** emergency expense by any means, up from **11%** in 2021.
- **37%** of U.S. adults used their emergency savings in the past 12 months.
- **26%** of those who pulled from their emergency savings withdrew between **$1,000 and $2,499**.
- **80%** of people who used their emergency savings used the money for essentials.
- **30%** of adults indicated they could not cover three months of expenses by any means.
- Total cash reserves rose by about **3 to 5%** year over year in 2025, per the JPMorgan Chase Institute.

## Recent Developments

- The Federal Reserve’s 2024 SHED found **55%** of adults had rainy day savings to cover three months of expenses.
- FINRA Foundation’s sixth wave of the National Financial Capability Study found **46%** of U.S. adults have set aside three months of living expenses, down from **53%** in 2021.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ 2024 Consumer Expenditure Survey reports average annual expenditures of **$78,535** for all consumer units, a **1.8%** increase from **$77,158** in 2023.
- Bankrate’s October survey found **32%** of respondents reported having somewhat less or much less emergency savings than at the start of the year.
- Bankrate’s December survey registered **47%** of Americans with the liquidity to cover a **$1,000** emergency expense.
- The FDIC posted a national savings deposit rate of **0.38%** alongside a national rate cap of **4.39%** as of April 2026.

## The $400 Emergency Expense Tracking Series

The Federal Reserve’s $400 emergency-expense question anchors a long-running time series.

- **50%** of respondents could cover a **$400** emergency expense with cash or its equivalent in 2013.
- **53%** could cover it in 2014.
- **59%** could cover it by 2017.
- **68%** reached the same threshold by 2021, the peak of the series.
- **63%** of all adults said they would cover a **$400** emergency expense exclusively using cash or its equivalent, unchanged from 2022 and 2023.
- **13%** of all adults said they would be unable to pay a **$400** emergency expense by any means in 2024, up from **11%** in 2021.

YearShare who could cover $400 with cash equivalent201350%201453%201759%202168%202263%202363%202463%*Source: Federal Reserve Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking; Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis*

> By the numbers: According to the Federal Reserve SHED, the **$400** cash-cover reading fell from its 2021 high of **68%** to **63%** in 2024, a **5 percentage points** decline, while the share unable to pay the expense at all moved from **11%** to **13%**.

## The $1,000 Emergency Expense Gap

The Bankrate $1,000 reading is the harder test of household liquidity.

- Just **47%** of Americans indicate they have sufficient liquidity or access to funds to cover a **$1,000** emergency expense, per Bankrate’s December 2025 survey.
- **29%** of Americans have more credit card debt than emergency savings.
- **31%** of Americans feel building emergency savings and lowering credit card debt are equally important priorities.
- **29%** of Americans said they prioritize increasing their emergency savings.
- **21%** are focused on paying down debt.
- Bankrate’s survey sampled **2,564** U.S. adults polled in December 2025.

For context on long-term savings deficits beyond the near-term emergency cushion, our [retirement savings gap statistics](https://coinlaw.io/retirement-savings-gap-statistics/) cover the parallel deficit on the long-horizon side.

Bankrate survey waveCould cover $1,000 emergency from savingsDecember 202547%Prior year (Bankrate annual context)Approximately 44% covered, per Bankrate’s earlier reading*Source: Bankrate Emergency Savings Report, December 2025*

## Americans Without Any Emergency Savings

The Bankrate generational data separates savings adequacy with a sharp gradient.

- Nearly **1 in 4 (24%)** of Americans have no emergency savings at all.
- **34%** of Gen Zers (ages 18-28) report no emergency savings.
- **28%** of millennials (ages 29-44) have no emergency savings.
- **24%** of Gen Xers (ages 45-60) have none.
- **16%** of baby boomers (ages 61-79) have none.
- **29%** of Americans have more [credit card debt](https://coinlaw.io/credit-card-debt-statistics/) than emergency savings, compared with **44%** who have more savings than credit card debt.

The Gen Z reading reflects the cohort’s stage in the earnings curve and the cost of housing and student debt; the boomer reading reflects decades of compounding. Our [household savings statistics](https://coinlaw.io/global-household-savings-statistics/) coverage shows the generational ordering rarely inverts.

![Emergency Fund Levels Across Generations](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/emergency-fund-levels-across-generations.jpg "Emergency Fund Levels Across Generations")

## Three-Month Expense Buffer Adequacy

Three months of expenses is the lower bound most financial-planning conventions cite (our [financial planning industry statistics](https://coinlaw.io/financial-planning-industry-statistics/) coverage tracks the broader profession). Two large primary surveys produce similar but distinct readings, methodology differs, and the gap is worth flagging.

- **55%** of adults said they had set aside money for three months of expenses in an emergency savings or rainy-day fund in 2024, per the Federal Reserve SHED.
- The 2024 reading rose slightly from **54%** in 2023, down from a high of **59%** in 2021.
- **15%** of all adults said they could cover three months of expenses by borrowing, selling assets, or drawing on other savings.
- **30%** of adults indicated they could not cover three months of expenses by any means.
- The FINRA NFCS sixth wave found **46%** of U.S. adults had set aside three months of living expenses, down from **53%** in 2021.
- Bankrate’s May 2025 survey found **46%** of Americans have enough emergency savings to cover three months of expenses.

> Worth noting: The Federal Reserve SHED reads higher than FINRA and Bankrate because the Fed asks whether adults have set aside money for a rainy-day fund, while FINRA and Bankrate ask whether respondents currently hold the amount. Treat the gap as methodological rather than contradictory: respondents may report having earmarked savings without actually holding three months of expenses on hand.

![Emergency Savings Trends Across Major U.S. Surveys](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/emergency-savings-trends-across-major-u-s-surveys.jpg "Emergency Savings Trends Across Major U.S. Surveys")

## Six-Month Expense Buffer Adequacy

The six-month benchmark is the upper bound that financial-planning conventions often cite.

- **27%** of Americans have enough emergency savings to cover six months of expenses, per Bankrate’s May 2025 survey.
- **19%** of Americans could cover three to five months of expenses from their emergency savings.
- **30%** of Americans have some emergency savings, but not enough to cover three months’ expenses.
- **85%** of Americans say they would need at least three months of expenses in emergency savings to feel comfortable, but only **46%** have that much.
- **63%** of Americans say they would need to have at least six months of expenses saved to feel comfortable, but only **27%** have that much.
- **60%** of Americans are uncomfortable with their level of emergency savings, **31%** very uncomfortable, **29%** somewhat uncomfortable.

Buffer adequacyShare of Americans (May 2025)No emergency savings24%Some, less than 3 months30%3 to 5 months19%6 months or more27%*Source: Bankrate Emergency Savings Survey, May 16-19, 2025*

## Emergency Savings by Income Quintile

The income gradient produces the sharpest cut across the SHED demographic tables. Readers tracking the broader income distribution can compare against our [wealth inequality statistics](https://coinlaw.io/wealth-inequality-statistics/) coverage.

- **24%** of adults with family income less than **$25,000** have three months of emergency savings.
- **40%** of adults with family income of at least **$25,000** but under **$50,000** have three months of emergency savings.
- **56%** of adults with family income of **$50,000 to $99,999** have three months of emergency savings.
- **75%** of adults with family income of **$100,000 or more** have three months of emergency savings.
- Average annual expenditures ranged from **$35,046** for consumer units in the lowest income quintile to **$150,342** for consumer units in the highest income quintile in 2024.
- A three-month buffer at the lowest-quintile spending level requires approximately **$8,762**.

![Emergency Savings Rates By Household Income](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/emergency-savings-rates-by-household-income.jpg "Emergency Savings Rates by Household Income")

> Key finding: According to the Federal Reserve’s 2024 SHED, **75%** of households earning **$100,000 or more** carry three months of emergency savings, while only **24%** of households with family income less than **$25,000** do, a **51 percentage points** gap that captures the sharpest demographic cut in the data.

## Emergency Savings by Age and Generation

Age tracks closely with savings adequacy in the Federal Reserve data.

- **36%** of adults aged **18-29** have three months of emergency savings.
- **50%** of adults aged **30-44** have three months of emergency savings.
- **54%** of adults aged **45-59** have three months of emergency savings.
- **72%** of adults aged **60 and older** have three months of emergency savings.
- **41%** of baby boomers have at least six months of expenses saved, the highest share among the generations Bankrate measured.
- **10%** of Gen Zers have at least six months of expenses saved, the lowest share.

Age band3-month emergency savings (%)18-2936%30-4450%45-5954%60+72%*Source: Federal Reserve SHED 2024 (Table 23)*

## Emergency Savings by Race, Education, and Sex

The Fed’s demographic cuts also surface a race-ethnicity gradient, a disability gradient, and a sex gap.

- **60%** of White adults have three months of emergency savings.
- **41%** of Black adults have three months of emergency savings.
- **44%** of Hispanic adults have three months of emergency savings.
- **69%** of Asian adults have three months of emergency savings.
- **41%** of adults with a disability have three months of emergency savings, versus **59%** of those without a disability.
- **57%** of men have three months of emergency savings, versus **53%** of women.
- Per the FINRA Foundation NFCS sixth wave, **80%** of college graduates have a retirement account, compared with **37%** of those with no college experience.

![Emergency Savings Rates By Demographic Group](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/emergency-savings-rates-by-demographic-group.jpg "Emergency Savings Rates by Demographic Group")

Readers tracking the parallel financial literacy data can compare against our [financial literacy statistics](https://coinlaw.io/financial-literacy-statistics/) hub.

## The Inflation Squeeze on Household Reserves

- **54%** of Americans are saving less for emergency expenses due to inflation or rising prices.
- Consumer prices were **26%** higher than they were in December 2019, per CPI data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
- **26%** of Americans cite changing income or unemployment as a reason for saving less.
- **17%** cite recent interest rate cuts.
- **32%** of October 2025 respondents reported having somewhat less or much less emergency savings than at the start of the year.
- **19%** reported having more savings than at the start of the year.

Reason cited for saving lessShare of AmericansInflation / rising prices54%Changing income / unemployment26%Recent interest rate cuts17%*Source: Bankrate Emergency Savings Survey, October 2025; BLS CPI data*

## Job Loss and Income Loss Anxiety

Bankrate’s worry survey captures how households self-rate their preparedness for a sudden income loss.

- **43%** of respondents would be “very worried” about covering immediate living expenses over the next month if they lost their primary source of household income tomorrow.
- **25%** would be “somewhat worried”.
- **17%** said they would be “not too worried”.
- **12%** said they would be “not at all worried”.
- **72%** of Gen Zers would feel very or somewhat worried about covering immediate living expenses after a job loss.
- **61%** of baby boomers would feel very or somewhat worried, the lowest reading among the four generations Bankrate measured.

![Financial Anxiety After Income Loss By Generation](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/financial-anxiety-after-income-loss-by-generation.jpg "Financial Anxiety After Income Loss by Generation")

## How Households Tapped Emergency Savings

Tapping behaviour matters as much as buffer adequacy in the Bankrate dataset.

- **37%** of U.S. adults used their emergency savings in the past 12 months, per Bankrate’s February 2025 reading.
- **39%** did not use their emergency savings in the past 12 months.
- **42%** of millennials tapped their emergency savings in the last 12 months, the highest generational share.
- **33%** of baby boomers tapped their emergency savings, the lowest generational share.
- **26%** of people who pulled from their emergency savings withdrew between **$1,000 and $2,499**.
- **80%** of people who used their emergency savings did so for essentials.
- **51%** of those who tapped did so for an unplanned emergency expense such as a medical bill or car repair.
- **38%** used the funds for monthly bills such as rent and utilities.
- **32%** used the funds for day-to-day expenses such as food or supplies.

Withdrawal amountShare of those who tappedLess than $50018%$500-$99922%$1,000-$2,49926%*Source: Bankrate Emergency Savings Survey, February 11-14, 2025*

> The takeaway: Bankrate’s February 2025 data shows that **80%** of those who pulled from emergency savings used the money for essentials, with **51%** covering unplanned medical or car expenses and **38%** covering monthly bills, and **32%** covering day-to-day expenses such as food. The pattern points to a buffer functioning as intended: a backstop for genuine cost shocks rather than discretionary spending.

## Where Americans Park Emergency Funds and the Yield-Leakage Gap

Deposit APYs vary by an order of magnitude between legacy savings accounts and high-yield savings accounts.

- The FDIC national savings deposit rate is **0.38%** as of April 20, 2026, based on the $2,500 product tier.
- The FDIC national rate cap on savings deposits is **4.39%**.
- The FDIC national money market rate is **0.57%**.
- The FDIC national 12-month CD rate is **1.53%**.
- The FDIC national rate cap on money market deposits is **4.39%**.
- Total cash reserves (bank accounts plus CDs, brokerages, and similar) returned to positive growth, rising by about **3 to 5%** year-over-year in 2025, per the JPMorgan Chase Institute.
- Lower-income households appear to be leading this turnaround, seeing the most growth since mid-2024.
- The spread between the FDIC rate cap and the national savings rate stands at **4.01 percentage points**.

![FDIC Deposit Product Interest Rates by Type](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/fdic-deposit-product-interest-rates-by-type.jpg "FDIC Deposit Product Interest Rates by Type")

Readers comparing personal-finance tools that surface higher-yield options may want our personal finance app industry statistics for a broader context.

## Three Months of Expenses at National Spending Levels

The Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey publishes the canonical reference for U.S. household spending.

- Average annual expenditures for all consumer units in 2024 were **$78,535**, a **1.8%** increase from **$77,158** in 2023.
- The average income before taxes was **$104,207** in 2024.
- Monthly average household spending in 2024 was approximately **$6,545**.
- A three-month buffer at the average national spending was approximately **$19,634** in 2024.
- A six-month buffer at the average national spending was approximately **$39,268** in 2024.
- **18%** of adults said the largest emergency expense they could handle right now using only savings was under **$100**.
- **13%** of adults could handle an emergency expense of **$100 to $499** using only savings.
- **48%** of adults could handle an emergency expense of **$2,000 or more** using only savings.

Buffer targetApproximate dollar amount at 2024 average spending1 month$6,5453 months$19,6346 months$39,26812 months$78,535*Source: BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2024; CoinLaw calculations*

> Why it matters: Bankrate reports that **46%** of Americans hold three months of emergency savings; against the BLS-derived **$19,634** three-month spending baseline at 2024 average household expenditures, that puts the median household with any three-month buffer at around **$20,000** liquid, while a six-month buffer requires roughly **$39,268**.

## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

**What percentage of Americans had an emergency fund in 2026?**Roughly three-quarters of U.S. adults hold some emergency savings, while 24% have none at all per Bankrate’s May 2025 survey. The Federal Reserve’s 2024 SHED found 55% have three months of expenses saved, and FINRA’s National Financial Capability Study reads 46%. Each measures adequacy rather than the mere existence of a fund.

 

**How much do financial planners suggest keeping in an emergency fund?**Common financial-planning conventions cite three to six months of household expenses as a buffer for income disruption. At the BLS 2024 average household spending of $78,535 per year, three months equals roughly $19,634, and six months equals roughly $39,268. Personal targets vary by household; speak with a qualified financial professional for individual planning.

 

**What percentage of Americans cannot cover a $1,000 emergency expense?**About 53% of Americans say they could not cover a $1,000 emergency expense entirely from savings, per Bankrate’s December 2025 survey. The corollary reading: 47% indicate they have sufficient liquidity. Bankrate has tracked this measure for more than a decade.

 

**Has emergency savings adequacy improved or worsened since the pandemic stimulus high?**The picture is mixed across surveys. The Federal Reserve’s SHED $400 reading peaked at 68% in 2021, and the share has held at 63% in 2022 and 2023. The three-month adequacy reading fell from a high of 59% in 2021 to 55% per SHED, and from 53% in 2021 to 46% per FINRA’s NFCS.

 

**Where should I keep an emergency fund?**Households commonly hold emergency cash in savings accounts, money market accounts, or CDs at FDIC-insured institutions. The FDIC’s national savings rate sits at 0.38% as of April 2026, while top high-yield savings accounts publish APYs of 4% to 5%. Both account types are FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per depositor, per institution. Account selection should be made with a qualified financial professional, given individual liquidity needs.

 

**How many Americans tapped their emergency savings recently?**Bankrate’s February 2025 survey found 37% of U.S. adults used their emergency savings in the past 12 months. 42% of millennials tapped, followed by 38% of Gen Xers, 34% of Gen Zers, and 33% of baby boomers. Of those who tapped, 80% used the funds for essentials.

 

 

## Conclusion

The headline number remains the same one Bankrate has tracked for more than a decade. **47%** of U.S. adults indicate sufficient liquidity to cover a **$1,000** emergency expense. The Federal Reserve’s $400 reading sits at **63%**, with the FINRA NFCS three-month reading at **46%** and **24%** of Americans holding no emergency savings at all.

The picture is one of a household balance sheet that thinned through three years of elevated prices, with lower-income households and younger adults absorbing most of the strain. What comes next depends on the path of interest rates, the labour market, and household-level decisions made with a qualified financial professional. None of the data above is financial advice.