indimom
Are We There Yet?
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2008
- Messages
- 6,601
She did set aside money for home and car repairs, but more of them happened this year than expected.
I do risk analysis for a living - well, its part of my job. The way you do this "officially" is you say....
There is a 20% my car will need a major repair this year and cost $3k, reserve $600.
There is a 40% chance my roof will need to be replaced. We are on year 11 of ten year shingles - I might get another year or two out of it - thats $20k = reserve $8k.
There is a 10% chance I'll have unexpected medical expenses, my deductible is $6k = reserve $600.
You set aside $9,000.
Then you set aside some more "stuff blew up that wasn't expected money."
And you are screwed if the roof needs to be replaced and the car has major repairs.
We like to believe that if we save enough we will be safe. But you know what, it isn't true, unless you are Bill Gates, chances are pretty good you can't save "enough" for every possible emergency. And eventually you need to balance savings with living. The OP did everything right - she had her rainy day fund. She paid for vacation in cash - she just had a "bad year" and now her rainy day fund is exhausted. But the thing with risk analysis is its a probability game - chances are pretty good that having all this bad stuff happen this year, next year there will be a lot less of it, and she'll be able to rebuild the fund. When everything goes wrong, the next year the roof doesn't need to be replaced - its under warranty. And the cars transmission is good for another 30k miles. There may be new risks, and you are constantly reviewing and reserving for them. But you do crawl yourself out of the hole - a lot more successfully than if you had to put the new roof on the Visa card.

Since we're on the subject, how do people "plan" for their medical emergencies?? Do you allow more and more to build in that fund year to year, or just hold onto a certain amount?
I'll honestly admit, we had NO medical savings whatsoever - which was the biggest part of our problem. We could have handled the other issues, but topped with the medical it got difficult.
In the ten years prior, we had nothing more than occasional antibiotics, one run for stitches, and one broken nose between the four of us. We basically assumed we were "healthy" and didn't anticipate anything worse than a broken bone from sports or maybe an illness like gall stones or kidney stones for the adults. In reality, statistically, maybe we were overdue for something and should have been steadily building a medical account all those years??

How do you know how much is enough when it comes to medical emergencies?? How much (beyond your deductible) do you save??