Sinking funds: stop surprise bills wrecking your month
Some expenses aren't really surprises — we just treat them that way. Car maintenance, the annual insurance premium, the holidays, a vet visit: we know they're coming, just not exactly when. A sinking fund is the quietly powerful habit of saving for those in small monthly amounts, so the bill arrives already paid for.
What a sinking fund actually is
A sinking fund is money you set aside gradually for a specific, expected cost. Instead of getting hit with a $600 car-insurance bill all at once, you save $50 a month for twelve months and the bill barely registers. It's the opposite of scrambling. And it's different from an emergency fund: an emergency fund is for the genuinely unexpected, while a sinking fund is for the expenses you can see coming if you look.
The costs worth planning for
Everyone's list is different, but these are the usual culprits that blow up budgets when they're not planned:
- Car: maintenance, tires, registration, repairs.
- Annual or semi-annual bills: insurance premiums, subscriptions, memberships, property taxes.
- Health: dental work, glasses, deductibles, pet care.
- Home: appliance replacement, seasonal maintenance.
- Gifts and holidays: the year-end stretch that surprises people every single year.
The one bit of math you need
Sizing a sinking fund is simple: take the total cost and divide it by the number of months until you'll need it.
Expecting roughly $900 in car costs over the year? That's $900 ÷ 12 = $75 a month. Planning $600 for the holidays and it's June? That's $600 ÷ 6 = $100 a month to be ready. Our percentage calculator can help if you'd rather work backward from a share of your income. Total up all your monthly sinking amounts and you'll know exactly what to set aside each month to make the whole year predictable.
Where to keep them
You don't need a dozen separate accounts. Many people keep one savings account and simply track the categories on paper or in a note — the total in the account, and a list of how much "belongs" to each fund. Others use a bank that allows sub-accounts or "buckets." Either works. What matters is keeping this money separate from your everyday spending so it's there when the planned bill lands.
Why this small habit changes everything
The reason sinking funds feel almost magical is that they convert the lumpy, stressful shape of real expenses into a smooth, boring monthly line. Most "budget emergencies" aren't emergencies at all — they're predictable costs that nobody set money aside for. Plan for them, and the year stops ambushing you. That calm is the whole point.