A sinking fund is money you set aside in small, regular amounts to pay for a known future expense. Instead of letting a $1,200 car insurance bill or a $600 holiday budget hit your checking account all at once, you save $100 a month into a dedicated bucket so the money is ready when the bill arrives. Corporations use the same idea at scale to prepare for bond payoffs and equipment replacements.
Key takeaways
- A sinking fund is a pot of money saved gradually for a specific, planned expense — not for emergencies.
- For individuals, common sinking funds include annual insurance premiums, car repairs, holiday gifts, annual travel, back-to-school costs, and quarterly taxes.
- For companies, sinking funds are used to retire bonds early or replace depreciating assets without a single large cash outflow.
- A sinking fund differs from an emergency fund: sinking funds are for expenses you know are coming; emergency funds are for expenses you don’t.
- The right monthly contribution is simply (total expected cost) ÷ (months until due).
What is a sinking fund?
A sinking fund is a savings account or budget category earmarked for a single future expense, funded in fixed increments on a predictable schedule. The term comes from 18th-century British public finance, where governments created sinking funds to “sink” (retire) outstanding debt bit by bit. Today the mechanics are identical whether you’re a sole proprietor saving for Q4 estimated taxes or a corporation saving to redeem a bond issue.
The defining feature is intentionality. An emergency fund sits ready for the unknown. A sinking fund targets a specific, dollar-quantified, date-known outflow.
How a sinking fund works
The process is three steps, repeated per category:
- Identify a future cost. A $900 car insurance premium due in December, a $2,400 family holiday in June, a $1,500 annual Amazon AWS bill — anything predictable.
- Divide by the months until due. $900 ÷ 12 = $75/month. $2,400 ÷ 6 = $400/month. Put that number in your monthly budget under the sinking-fund category.
- Park the money somewhere boring. A high-yield savings account, a separate checking bucket, or a named envelope inside your budgeting app. The point is to keep it unreachable for impulse spending but liquid for the target date.
When the bill comes due, you already have the full amount. No credit card bridge, no emergency fund raid.
Examples of sinking funds for freelancers
A self-employed designer might run six sinking funds simultaneously:
- Quarterly estimated taxes — $800/month, withdrawn every three months for the IRS payment.
- Annual software renewals (Adobe, Figma, accounting tools) — $60/month.
- Health insurance out-of-pocket max — $200/month.
- Home office equipment replacement (laptop every 3 years) — $75/month.
- Vacation — $250/month.
- Holiday gifts — $75/month.
Total: $1,460/month set aside for predictable future costs. None of these hit as surprises, none require credit, and none drain the emergency fund.
Sinking fund vs. emergency fund
Both are savings, but they answer different questions. An emergency fund answers “what if I lose my income or face an unexpected bill?” A sinking fund answers “how will I pay for this specific thing I already know is coming?”
Mixing them creates two common problems. Using an emergency fund for planned expenses depletes the safety net. Treating a sinking fund as flexible savings means the planned expense becomes another surprise. Keep them separate — different accounts or at minimum different named categories in your budgeting app.
Sinking funds for businesses and bonds
The corporate version works at scale. A company issuing $10 million in 20-year bonds might commit to depositing $400,000 annually into a sinking fund so that principal is gradually available for redemption. This reduces the risk of a single enormous payment at maturity and typically lets the company borrow at a lower interest rate because bondholders face less default risk. The same pattern applies to capital replacement: a trucking fleet saves monthly so trucks can be replaced on schedule without taking out new debt.
Frequently asked questions
A sinking fund is for expenses you know are coming (an annual insurance premium, a car repair, a vacation). An emergency fund is for expenses you can’t predict (job loss, a medical bill, a major appliance failure). Both are savings, but only one should be touched when you’re surprised — the emergency fund.
Start with any bill that arrives annually or irregularly: car and home insurance, property taxes, vehicle registration, software renewals, gifts, vacation, school costs, and quarterly estimated taxes if you’re self-employed. If a known cost is more than $200 and doesn’t arrive monthly, it’s a sinking fund candidate.
A high-yield savings account is the standard choice — it’s liquid, earns interest, and is separate from your spending account so you’re not tempted to dip in. If you’re using a budgeting app like YNAB or Monarch, you can also use envelope-style categories within a single account and let the app track the earmarked balance.
Divide the total expected cost by the number of months until it’s due. A $1,200 annual car insurance premium that’s due in 12 months means $100/month. If it’s due in 6 months, it’s $200/month. If a cost is recurring (like quarterly taxes), divide the annual total by 12 and save every month.
No — the concept originated in public finance and is still used heavily by corporations to retire bonds, but the personal finance version is arguably more common today. Any freelancer, household, or small business that uses a budgeting app is probably running informal sinking funds, even if they’re called “annual expenses” or “goals” categories.
Related terms
- Budget
- Zero-based budgeting
- Emergency fund
- Envelope budgeting
- Fixed expenses
- Variable expenses
- Discretionary income
- Annuity