If you’ve just learned what a sinking fund is, the very next question is always the same: “what should I actually have sinking funds for?” This is the complete list — 60+ sinking fund categories organised by group, with guidance on which ones to start with and how many funds you realistically need.
What is a sinking fund category?
A sinking fund category is simply a named savings target for one specific future expense. Instead of one vague “savings” pile, you create separate labelled funds — one for car insurance, one for Eid gifts, one for school fees — and save a small amount into each every month. When the expense arrives, its fund is ready, and your budget never takes the hit.
The categories below cover virtually every predictable expense a household faces. You will not need all of them — most families run between three and eight active funds. Skim the list, note the ones that made you think “oh yes, that one always surprises me,” and start there.
Vehicle sinking fund categories
Vehicle costs are the classic sinking fund starting point because they’re large, annual, and utterly predictable. Car insurance alone catches millions of households off guard every year — despite arriving on the same date every single year.
Home sinking fund categories
Home expenses are where sinking funds prove their worth most dramatically. A washing machine doesn’t break politely — it breaks the week before school fees are due. An appliance replacement fund of even $30–50 per month means these moments become inconveniences rather than crises.
Family & celebration sinking fund categories
Celebration expenses are emotionally loaded — nobody wants to feel financially stressed during Eid or Christmas. Yet these dates are literally printed on the calendar a year in advance. A gifts fund started in January makes December (or Ramadan) genuinely joyful instead of quietly stressful.
Education sinking fund categories
Travel sinking fund categories
Travel is the category where saving ahead completely transforms the experience. A holiday paid for before you leave is a different holiday — no post-trip credit card statement, no interest charges following you home. For major spiritual journeys like Umrah and Hajj, a dedicated fund with a multi-year timeline turns an overwhelming cost into a calm monthly commitment.
Health sinking fund categories
Annual bills & subscriptions
Technology sinking fund categories
Buying a phone outright with a sinking fund instead of a 24-month plan is one of the cleanest interest-free wins available. The maths almost always favours saving ahead — and you own the device from day one.
How many sinking fund categories should you have?
Start with three to five. The most common beginner mistake is creating fifteen funds in a burst of enthusiasm, then abandoning the whole system within two months because tracking fifteen tiny amounts feels like a chore.
The proven approach: pick your three largest irregular expenses from the past 12 months — for most households that’s car insurance, a celebration season (Eid or Christmas), and school costs or home repairs. Run just those for three months. Once the habit feels automatic, add more funds one at a time.
How to choose your first categories
Open your bank statements from the last 12 months and look for every transaction over a few hundred dollars that was not part of your normal monthly spending. Every one of those is a sinking fund candidate. Rank them by two things:
- Size — the bigger the expense, the more a sinking fund helps
- Certainty — insurance renewals and school fees are 100% certain; “maybe a new couch” is not
Start with the expenses that are both large and certain. That’s where sinking funds deliver the most peace of mind per dollar saved.
Sinking fund categories vs budget categories — the difference
A common confusion: budget categories cover your regular monthly spending (groceries, rent, petrol), while sinking fund categories cover irregular future expenses (insurance, gifts, repairs). Your budget handles this month. Your sinking funds handle the months ahead. You need both, and they should not overlap — if an expense happens every single month, it belongs in your budget, not a sinking fund.
Where to keep your sinking fund money
The simplest setup that actually works: one separate savings account, apart from your everyday spending account, with a written breakdown of what belongs to which fund. Some people prefer a separate account per major fund — that works too, but most banks limit how many accounts you can open, and the written breakdown achieves the same clarity.
The critical rule is separation: sinking fund money must not sit in the account you spend from. Money you can see in your spending balance is money that gets spent.
Start your sinking funds today
You now have every category worth considering. The next step is turning your chosen categories into an actual month-by-month plan — how much to set aside, every month, for each fund, so everything is covered before it’s due.
Our free Sinking Funds Planner does exactly that: add your expenses, set your due months, and get a personalised printable schedule in about five minutes. No signup, no interest calculations, completely free.
