
Losing My Job Without Savings Was a Nightmare. Here's How to Start a Layoff Fund
Be prepared with enough money to cover several months of expenses in case you're laid off.I remember when I was a part of a mass layoff. I was in my early 20s with three months of severance and no idea how I'd land a new job before the checks stopped rolling in. I didn't have much savings stashed away, and an emergency fund hadn't ever occurred to me.
With job cuts on the rise and recession risks still high, CNET recently covered how to prepare for a layoff. One of the most important takeaways is to build an emergency fund while you're still employed. I'd recommend a layoff fund, too.
If you lose your job, you want peace of mind that you'll be able to cover necessities like housing, food and bills -- even if you end up receiving severance or unemployment benefits. A layoff fund is money set aside in case you're out of work for several months or more than a year. After you commit to saving, you'll want to stash that money in the right place. Here's my take.
What your layoff fund should cover
To start building your layoff fund, look at your personal circumstances. Factor in the monthly expenses you cover now, accounting for everything from groceries and rent to gas and utilities. Also, consider how you'll pay off debt or any new expenses that might come up.
For example, if you're currently receiving health insurance through your employer, you might have to enroll in a marketplace health care plan or jump on a family plan. If you're able to continue your employer's health insurance coverage through COBRA, you'll need enough money to cover that cost out of pocket.
Save several months of expenses in your layoff fund
Saving a large amount of money to stay afloat for an entire year can feel impossible, especially if you're living paycheck to paycheck. But every small bit of savings while you're still employed can help later if you lose your job. Consider automating contributions from your checking account to your savings fund so you don't even have to think about it.
If you have extra time or resources, a side hustle or part-time job can help you shore up your layoff fund. Also, look at what you can cut from your budget now, like subscription services, dining out or even vacations.
These Are the Safest Places to Keep Your Money Right Now These Are the Safest Places to Keep Your Money Right Now
Click to unmute
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Skip Backward
Skip Forward
Next playlist item
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
3:55
Loaded :
12.76%
0:00
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
3:55
Share
Fullscreen
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text
Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background
Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background
Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Close Modal Dialog
This is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button.
Close Modal Dialog
This is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button.
These Are the Safest Places to Keep Your Money Right Now
Keep your layoff fund in a high-yield savings account
You never know when you'll be laid off, so you'll want your funds to be easily accessible and liquid. I recommend a high-yield savings account for your layoff fund.
Here's why: With an HYSA, you'll earn interest on the money you're setting aside. Currently, many online-only banks have annual percentage yields between 3.50% and 4% APY, which can help you get better returns on your money than a traditional savings account.
For instance, if you deposit $100 into an HYSA now, and contribute $100 a week for the next six months, you'll have saved an additional $2,400. If the account has a 3.6% annual percentage yield, you'll earn close to $20 in interest, bringing your balance close to $2,420.
That might not seem like much, but if you make the same deposits into a traditional savings account with a 0.02% APY, you'll earn only pennies in interest. Also, make sure you're not losing money by paying a monthly maintenance fee on the account.
Savings rates are variable, so how much you earn in interest could change over the next several months.
Regardless of the APY, what matters most is saving what you can now to prepare for the unexpected.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
15 minutes ago
- New York Times
Meta Invests Nearly $15 Billion in Scale AI to Kick-Start Superintelligence Lab
Meta said on Thursday that it planned to invest nearly $15 billion in Scale AI, a start-up that works with data to train artificial intelligence systems, in a deal that Meta hopes will add needed muscle to its disappointing A.I. division. As a condition of the deal, Alexandr Wang, Scale AI's 28-year-old chief executive, plans to join Meta in a top leadership role in the new division, which Meta is calling its Superintelligence lab. Mr. Wang, whom people inside Meta have taken to calling a visionary leader, will also bring a team of employees from Scale AI to work at Meta. The move to invest billions in Scale AI, an amount equal to about 10 percent of Meta's revenue in 2024, would be Meta's first major minority investment in an outside company. It is Meta's second-largest deal, after the $19 billion acquisition of the messaging app WhatsApp about 11 years ago. Meta is scrambling to catch up with A.I. competitors such as Google, Microsoft, OpenAI and Anthropic, as industry executives jockey for an edge in what they believe will be the most transformative technology in a generation. 'Meta has finalized our strategic partnership and investment in Scale AI,' a spokesperson for Meta said in a statement. 'As part of this, we will deepen the work we do together producing data for A.I. models, and Alexandr Wang will join Meta to work on our superintelligence efforts.' Meta's investment with Scale AI is unusually structured. Meta will take a minority stake in the start-up and receive little control over its direction. The structure was intentional. Executives at Meta and Scale AI were worried about drawing the attention of regulators. Meta is waiting on a federal judge's decision in an antitrust case scrutinizing its earlier acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp. The Federal Trade Commission under President Joseph R. Biden Jr. was skeptical of big technology acquisitions, and Lina Khan, who led the agency at the time, scrutinized multibillion-dollar investments in A.I. companies. The structure of those deals — which included Amazon's investments in Anthropic and Microsoft's backing of OpenAI — allowed the big companies to form close ties with smaller rivals while dodging regulatory issues. It is unclear if the F.T.C. under its new chairman, Andrew Ferguson, will continue down that path. But Mr. Ferguson has shown few signs of changing course. OpenAI kicked off the A.I. movement in late 2022 with the release of its chatbot ChatGPT, compelling companies like Google and Meta to build similar technologies. Meta found an important niche when it chose to open source its systems, freely sharing the underlying tech with developers and businesses. But its latest system, called LLAMA4, has not matched the technologies produced by its biggest rivals. Among technologists, superintelligence is a futuristic goal of A.I. development. OpenAI, Google and others have said their immediate aim is to build artificial general intelligence, or A.G.I., a machine that can do anything the human brain can do. Superintelligence, if it can be developed, would go beyond A.G.I.


Bloomberg
20 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Meta Announces Scale AI Investment, Recruits CEO to AI Unit
Meta Platforms Inc. said it finalized a multibillion-dollar investment in Scale AI and recruited the startup's chief executive officer to help oversee its artificial intelligence efforts — an unusual deal that signals a heightened push by the social media giant to catch up on AI development. Meta said Thursday that it has backed Scale, without including details. The size of the investment was $14.3 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter. The new $29 billion valuation includes the money raised, said the person, who asked not to be idenified discussing private information.


Geek Wire
21 minutes ago
- Geek Wire
As data center demand soars, Amazon expands use of recycled waste water to cool its cloud
Sustainability: News about the rapidly growing climate tech sector and other areas of innovation to protect our planet. SEE MORE Amazon data center in the Portland, Ore., area in 2022. (AWS Photo / Noah Berger) Amazon Web Services is more than halfway to its 2030 goal of being 'water positive' — meaning it replenishes more clean water than it uses. And supporting that effort is a newly announced initiative to expand its use of recycled waste water instead of drinking water to cool 120 of its U.S. data centers by the end of this decade. AWS is wringing more water out of its cloud operations, marking a 40% improvement in its water use efficiency over the past three years. And it's 53% of the way toward becoming water positive, based on 2024 data — up from 41% from the year before. 'We're pretty proud of the fact that our global water use efficiency is really industry leading,' Kevin Miller, vice president of global data center operations for AWS, said in an interview. The water challenge is driven by data centers containing servers that act as the backbone of the internet, powering increasingly popular artificial intelligence tools. The electronics produce intense heat that needs to be wicked away to keep the devices running properly, and cooling them requires a combination of energy and water use. The issue has become increasingly urgent as Amazon and other cloud giants expand their thirsty data center operations worldwide. Bloomberg recently reported that nearly two-thirds of the U.S. data centers that were built or are under development in the past three years are located in water-stressed areas. Amazon alone plans to invest $100 billion in its data centers over a decade, which includes construction of new facilities. Data center operators use a variety of cooling tech that include fans, air that's cooled using evaporated water, air conditioning, and direct liquid cooling. The strategies are a resource balancing act: air conditioning, for example, draws more electricity, but saves water, while cooling with evaporated water is less energy intensive, but sucks up water. Amazon also has clean energy goals to meet, and since 2023 has matched 100% of its electricity consumption with the purchase of an equal amount of power produced by carbon-free sources. PIpes carrying reclaimed water for cooling at an AWS data center. (AWS Photo) Optimizing cooling To keep its servers humming, AWS relies primarily on fans and evaporation-cooled air, depending on the location of the data center, the time of day, the weather and other factors. The moistened, cooled air is ultimately released from the building. 'We're constantly adjusting based on what's really going on throughout the day to keep it in the optimal cooling configuration, minimizing water usage,' Miller said. Since 2019, AWS has used recycled water at some data centers in Virginia, which is a hub for server facilities. The company currently uses reclaimed water at 24 sites, including locations in California and Singapore. The new initiative will expand the practice to Georgia and Mississippi. Miller declined to say how many data centers AWS has in total, saying that 120 sites represents 'a meaningful share' of its operations. The recycled water typically comes from sewage plants and has been treated but is not potable. By 2030, AWS expects to avoid the consumption of more than 530 million gallons of drinking-water through its use of recycled water. 'Amazon is not only preserving precious drinking water supplies for communities but also demonstrating that water reuse is a viable, sustainable solution for water-intensive industries,' said Brian Biesemeyer, interim executive director of the WateReuse Association, in a statement. To reach water positive, AWS is also investing in water storage efforts; the restoration of watersheds and wetlands that naturally replenish supplies; and the construction of water treatment systems. While it's making progress, critics say the tally should also include the significant amounts of water consumed by some of the power plants that provide energy to AWS. Racks of servers inside an AWS data center in 2023. (AWS Photo / Noah Berger) Water innovation AWS is on its sixth data center design and continues exploring ways to curb its water use, Miller said. That includes looking for leaks in pipes running to data centers. It's fine-tuning the material that the air flows through when it picks up the water to optimize the moisture in the air. AWS does dynamic models of the airflow within data centers for improved cooling. Other companies are likewise innovating to reduce water use, including fellow Seattle-area cloud behemoth Microsoft. Microsoft is using recycled water at sites in Washington, California, Texas and Singapore, and has designed a closed-loop cooling system, meaning it will need to be filled with water only once. It plans to deploy this approach in Wisconsin and Arizona next year. The company said it will use nominally more power than evaporation systems. 'The industry is committed to responsible water use,' said Josh Levi, president of the Data Center Coalition, by email. 'Data centers are actively investing in and deploying innovations, such as waterless cooling systems, closed-loop systems, and the use of recycled or reclaimed water.' But Amazon remains out in front when considering water use efficiency (WUE), a measure developed by the nonprofit group The Green Grid to indicate how well the resource is being used relative to a data center's energy consumption. Microsoft's WUE was 0.30 liters of water per kilowatt hour of power for its last fiscal year — which is a notable improvement over past performance. Amazon's WUE is half that amount, hitting 0.15 last year.