Sinking Funds: Saving Monthly for the Bill You Know Is Coming
beginner A sinking fund is a third kind of saving, distinct from an emergency fund and a budget: it's money set aside on purpose for one specific, dated, foreseeable expense — a car you'll replace on a predictable cycle, an annual insurance premium, a holiday season, a roof with a known lifespan. Because the cost and the rough timing are both knowable in advance, the math is simple division: shortfall divided by months of runway. Skip the habit and the expense doesn't go away — it just gets financed instead, paying interest on money you had months of advance warning to save. This lesson compares the two paths directly: what a sinking fund costs you per month against what financing the same shortfall would cost once the bill actually lands, plus the interest financing adds that saving ahead never does.