1. Your Own Emergency Fund/Short-Term Securities
Emergency funds should be held outside of tax-sheltered wrappers and include highly liquid investments like bank savings accounts, money market accounts, and so on. If you’re working, your emergency fund would ideally hold a minimum of three to six months’ worth of living expenses; retirees should target one to two years’ worth of anticipated portfolio withdrawals.
2. Low-Risk Assets in Taxable Account
Your next source of cash is other taxable holdings: investments in brokerage accounts, outside tax-sheltered vehicles. When identifying securities you could sell, focus on liquidity, tax consequences, and transaction fees.
3. Roth IRA Contributions
You can withdraw any Roth IRA contributions (the amount you put in, not investment earnings) at any time, without penalties or tax. The big downside, of course, is that you’ll have fewer retirement funds working for you.
4. Life Insurance Cash Values
You can withdraw money outright from your whole life insurance or variable universal life insurance policy and have it deducted from the face value. Those withdrawals are tax-free, assuming they don’t exceed the amount you’ve put in.
5. 401(k) Loan
Even though you’ll pay interest on a 401(k) loan, it gets paid back into your account. And the interest rates can be reasonable. But you’ll shrink your retirement savings. If you lose your job, you’ll be required to pay the loan back sooner, usually in 90 days. If you can’t, you’ll owe taxes and a 10 percent penalty, unless you’re 59½ or older.
6. Home Equity Line of Credit
The interest rates for borrowing against your home equity are usually reasonable, particularly if you maintain a good credit rating.
7. Hardship Withdrawals
Funds you take out of a 401(k) via a hardship withdrawal cannot be paid back and you’ll owe taxes on any untaxed dollars you pull out. You’ll also owe a 10 percent penalty unless you’re 59½ or older, or your situation meets one of several exceptions. Those taxes can take a big bite out of the amount that you remove from your account.
8. Reverse Mortgage
A reverse mortgage allows homeowners 62 or older to receive a pool of assets that represents equity in their homes. They don’t have to repay the loan as long as they’re in their homes, but when they leave, the borrowed amount, plus interest, is deducted from the home’s value.
9. Margin Loans
A margin account allows you to borrow against the value of the securities in your brokerage account. You might do this if you don’t want to sell the assets at a bad time or incur tax consequences.
10. Credit Cards
Some consumers have been able to play credit cards like a fiddle, shifting balances among cards with ultralow teaser rates and incurring little interest. For the rest of the world, credit cards are the single easiest way to wreck your financial standing. Rates are high, and credit card companies want to keep you paying for as long as possible. Thus, the minimum payments they require don’t make a dent in your balance’s principal.









