How To Build A Car Repair Fund
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Car repairs are one of the most common causes of budget disruption. They're also one of the most predictable — every car needs maintenance, and every car will eventually need repairs. The only question is whether the money will be there when it happens.
A car repair fund answers that question in advance. Here's how to build one.
How Much To Save

The right monthly contribution depends on your car's age, mileage, and service history. A rough guide:
- New car, low mileage, full warranty: €30–40/month
- 3–7 year old car, average mileage: €50–70/month
- Older car or high mileage: €80–120/month
If your car has a known issue or is approaching a major service, increase the contribution temporarily. Add 15% to whatever figure you land on as a buffer for unexpected repairs.
What The Fund Should Cover

Your car fund should cover everything car-related that doesn't happen every month: annual service, MOT or inspection, tyres, brakes, unexpected repairs, and any other maintenance costs. Some people also include their annual insurance renewal in a separate fund — keeping the car maintenance fund purely for mechanical costs.
When To Start

Start now, regardless of when the next service is due. Even if the car was just serviced, the next one is coming. Every month you contribute before the next repair is a month of buffer built. If a repair arrives before the fund is fully stocked, use whatever is in the fund and cover the shortfall from your emergency fund. Then rebuild.
Tracking The Fund

The Sinking Funds Tracker from VARDENCIA lets you track your car fund alongside all your other sinking funds — so you always know how much is available and how close you are to a comfortable buffer. For the full picture of why car repairs break budgets, why car repairs destroy so many budgets explains the pattern. And how much to put into sinking funds covers the calculation approach for all your funds.
The next car repair is coming. The only question is whether the money will be ready. Start the fund today, and the answer is always yes.