A standard emergency fund is three to six months of essential expenses, held in a high-interest savings account or short-term GIC. For a Canadian household with $4,500 in monthly fixed costs, that means $13,500 to $27,000 in cash. The exact target depends on your job stability, household size, debt load, and access to other liquid resources.
Quick answer: 3 to 6 months of essential expenses, in a cash or near-cash account you can access in 24 to 48 hours. Single-income households and self-employed earners should target 6 to 12 months.
What this means: Essential expenses are housing, food, utilities, insurance, transportation, and minimum debt payments — not discretionary spending. The point is to cover a job loss or income disruption without selling investments or relying on credit.
What to do next: Plug in your essential expenses and household type to see your target. Calculate your fund target →
Why three to six months
Canadian Employment Insurance covers up to 55% of insurable earnings to a maximum of around $683 per week in 2026 (for non-Quebec residents), and benefits start after a one-week waiting period. The average job search in Canada lasts 13 to 20 weeks. Three months of expenses bridges most cases; six months bridges a longer search or a household where EI is insufficient or not available.
How much you need by situation
| Situation | Target (months of expenses) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Dual-income, stable jobs, no kids | 3 months | One income covers most expenses if the other is lost |
| Single income, salaried, no kids | 6 months | Full income loss with no buffer from a partner |
| Dual-income with kids | 4-6 months | Higher fixed expenses (daycare, family insurance) |
| Self-employed / contract | 6-12 months | Income lumpy; no EI in most cases (though EI for self-employed special benefits exists) |
| Commission-only or seasonal | 9-12 months | Income can drop sharply during slow periods |
| Retired with pension + RRIF | 1-2 years | Investment downturn protection so you don’t sell at the wrong time |
What counts as essential expenses
- Housing: rent or mortgage, property tax, condo fees, home insurance
- Utilities: electricity, heat, water, internet, phone (basic plan)
- Food: groceries (not restaurants)
- Transportation: car payment, fuel, insurance, transit pass, basic maintenance
- Insurance: health, dental (if private), life, disability
- Minimum debt payments: credit card minimums, student loans, lines of credit (interest at minimum)
- Childcare: daycare or school fees if returning to work depends on it
- Medication: prescriptions and ongoing medical costs
Exclude: dining out, vacations, subscriptions you can pause, gym memberships, clothing beyond replacement, savings contributions.
Where to keep emergency fund money
| Account type | Typical 2026 rate | Access | Use for |
|---|---|---|---|
| High-interest savings (HISA) | 3.5-4.5% | Same-day | Full fund |
| Cashable GIC (1-year) | 4.0-4.5% | Within 30 days | Months 4-6 portion |
| TFSA HISA | 3.5-4.5% tax-free | Same-day, deposits regenerate room next year | Full fund if TFSA room allows |
| Big-bank chequing | 0-0.05% | Same-day | Operating cash only, not fund |
| Money market mutual fund | 3.5-4.5% | 1-2 business days | Optional, slightly more volatile |
| Stocks / crypto / non-registered investments | Variable | 2-3 business days | Not an emergency fund |
A TFSA HISA is usually the best home: same-day access, tax-free interest, and withdrawn funds restore TFSA room the following year. Avoid an RRSP for your emergency fund — withdrawals trigger immediate tax withholding and permanently reduce contribution room.
How to build the fund
- Calculate your essential monthly expenses. Be honest, not optimistic.
- Set the 3-month target first. A smaller, achievable goal builds momentum.
- Automate transfers. Set up a weekly or biweekly automatic transfer to a separate HISA. Even $50-$100 per pay adds up.
- Park windfalls. Tax refunds, work bonuses, GST/HST credits (or CGEB from July 2026), and gifts go to the emergency fund until it is full.
- Treat it as off-limits. Keep it at a different institution so it’s harder to drain on impulse.
- Top up after use. If you actually use the fund, refilling it is the next priority above debt acceleration and retirement contributions.
Worked example
Anita is a single Canadian with $5,200 in essential monthly expenses. She has stable salaried employment but only one income.
| Target tier | Months | Cash needed |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum (Tier 1) | 3 months | $15,600 |
| Recommended (Tier 2) | 6 months | $31,200 |
| Conservative (Tier 3) | 9 months | $46,800 |
At $400/month of saving, Anita reaches Tier 1 in 39 months. At $800/month, 19.5 months. Adding her annual tax refund ($2,800) and a $1,500 work bonus to the fund cuts the timeline to under 18 months at $800/month.
When an emergency fund becomes too big
Holding more than 12 months of expenses in cash costs you real growth. After about 6-12 months, additional dollars are better deployed:
- High-interest debt payoff (credit cards, lines of credit above ~5%)
- TFSA / RRSP contributions for long-term growth
- FHSA contributions if you’re saving for a first home
- RESP contributions for children (20% government grant)
Frequently asked questions
- How big should my emergency fund be in Canada?
- Three to six months of essential expenses for most households. Self-employed, single-income, or commission-based earners should target six to twelve months.
- Where should I keep my emergency fund?
- A high-interest savings account at an online bank, or a TFSA HISA for tax-free interest. The money should be accessible within 24 to 48 hours.
- Should I invest my emergency fund?
- No. Stocks and ETFs can fall 20-40% during the same recessions that cause job losses, defeating the purpose. Keep the fund in cash or near-cash.
- Should I use a TFSA for an emergency fund?
- Yes, if you have TFSA room. Interest is tax-free, withdrawals are penalty-free, and withdrawn amounts restore room the following calendar year.
- Is paying off debt more important than an emergency fund?
- Build a starter fund of $1,000-2,000 first, then aggressively pay off high-interest debt. After credit cards are paid off, build the full 3-6 month fund.
- What counts as an emergency?
- Income loss, major medical expense, urgent home repair, or essential vehicle repair. Not vacations, holiday spending, predictable annual expenses, or planned purchases.
- What expenses go in the calculation?
- Only essentials: housing, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments, childcare, and medication. Exclude dining out, subscriptions, and discretionary spending.