Your emergency fund should live in a high-interest savings account (HISA). Not your chequing account. Not invested. Not locked away.
A good HISA gives you:
- instant access
- zero risk
- some interest to offset inflation
That last part matters a lot. You’re not trying to grow this money aggressively, but letting it rot away at 0.01% interest is unnecessary. A HISA keeps your cash available while at least doing something in the background.
And no, market volatility and emergency funds do not mix. If your emergency fund is invested and the market drops 20% right when you need the money…you’ve just turned bad luck into a worse decision.
Where This Fits in a Canadian Setup
For Canadians, the cleanest place to keep an emergency fund is usually in a non-registered account. You want flexibility and no restrictions.
That said, some people use a TFSA HISA if they have contribution room and don’t need that space for long-term investing yet. That’s fine as long as you understand the trade-off. Every dollar sitting in cash inside a TFSA is a dollar not compounding.
Emergency funds come before aggressive investing. If you’re maxing out your TFSA but don’t have emergency cash, your priorities are backwards.
The Real Purpose of an Emergency Fund
The biggest benefit of an emergency fund isn’t financial!
When you have cash set aside:
- you don’t panic when something breaks
- you don’t sell investments at the worst time
- you don’t take the first bad option just to survive
Emergency funds protect your investments just as much as they protect you. They allow you to stay invested during market downturns instead of selling at the bottom.
Common Mistakes That Defeat the Whole Point
Here’s what ruins emergency funds:
- investing them
- lending them out
- using them for “kind of emergencies”
- keeping them somewhere hard to access
If it’s not boring, liquid, and reliable, it’s not an emergency fund.
The Bottom Line
Emergency funds aren’t optional. They’re the foundation everything else sits on. High-interest savings accounts aren’t exciting, but they do their job quietly and consistently.
Build the buffer first. Then invest with confidence.
I’m not a financial advisor. This content is for educational purposes only and shouldn’t be taken as financial advice. Always do your own research or consult a licensed professional before making financial decisions
An emergency fund won’t make you rich, but it will make you resilient.
And resilience changes how you move through life.
Purpose is hard to find when you’re constantly putting out fires. Resilience gives you the breathing room to look up and ask deeper questions about where you’re going and why.



