A Shocking Number of Americans Have No Emergency Savings
Money + Markets

A Shocking Number of Americans Have No Emergency Savings

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Many Americans are woefully ill-prepared for an unplanned expense, so much so that a whopping 66 million U.S. adults have zero dollars saved for an emergency, according to a new study.

When broken down by age, those in Generation X fared the worst: One-third of people ages 36 to 51 said they had saved nothing in an emergency fund. That compares with 27 percent of all others ages 18 or older, according to a Bankrate.com survey of 1,000 adults conducted earlier this month.

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Generally, the likelihood of having saved at least six months of expenses increases steadily after age 25, Bankrate said. Yet for Gen Xers, "those are the years when it catches up with you," said Bankrate's chief financial analyst Greg McBride.

"This underscores the fact that it takes time, especially because expenses grow faster than many Americans can save during the homebuying, family-raising years," McBride said. "If you are not in the habit of saving regularly, whatever you have is going to get wiped out sooner rather than later."

Currently, 47 percent of Americans said they either could not afford an emergency expense of $400, or would cover it by selling something or borrowing money, according to a separate report by the Federal Reserve Board's Division of Consumer and Community Affairs.

McBride recommends having at least six months' worth of expenses saved in an emergency fund. Just 28 percent of Americans have saved that much, the study said, although that's an improvement from last year's 22 percent.

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"Accumulating emergency savings requires establishing the habit," McBride said.

To get there, Katharine Perry, an associate financial consultant at Fort Pitt Capital Group, in Pittsburgh, suggests putting $20 from every paycheck into a savings account.\

"A little bit every month will ensure you are not stressing your cash flow," she said. Otherwise, any sudden expense, from car repairs to a burst pipe, could cause you to slide into debt, she said.

This article originally appeared on CNBC. Read more from CNBC:

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