Overview
Budget 1–2% of your home's value annually for maintenance and repairs so unexpected costs never catch you off guard.
Step-by-Step Guide
Calculate your annual maintenance target
Multiply your home's current market value by 1% for a minimum target and 2% for a comfortable buffer. For a $400,000 home, that is $4,000 to $8,000 per year. Older homes and homes in harsh climates should budget toward the higher end.
Open a dedicated savings account
Open a separate high-yield savings account labeled 'Home Maintenance Fund.' Keeping these funds separate from your general savings prevents you from accidentally spending them and makes it easy to track your balance.
Set up automatic monthly transfers
Divide your annual target by 12 and automate a monthly transfer from your checking account. For a $6,000 annual target, that is $500 per month. Schedule the transfer for the day after your paycheck arrives.
Audit your home's major systems and their ages
List every major system and appliance with its approximate age and expected lifespan. Prioritize: HVAC (15–20 years), water heater (10–12 years), roof (20–30 years), appliances (10–15 years). Items nearing end-of-life require larger reserves.
Adjust for your home's specific risk factors
Increase your budget if your home has older plumbing or electrical, a flat roof, mature trees near the foundation, a septic system, or a pool. Each of these adds $500 to $2,000 in annual maintenance risk.
Track spending and review quarterly
Log every maintenance expense in a spreadsheet or budgeting app. Review quarterly to compare actual spending against your target. If you consistently underspend, you are building a healthy cushion. If you overspend, increase your monthly transfer.
Replenish after large expenses
After a major repair — roof replacement, HVAC failure, or foundation work — increase your monthly contributions temporarily until the fund is restored to at least three months of normal contributions.
What You'll Need
Tools
- - Calculator or spreadsheet
- - Online banking access
Materials
- - List of home's major systems and their ages
- - Recent home appraisal or estimated market value
Cost Estimates
DIY Cost
$0 (just time to set up accounts and automate transfers)
Professional Cost
$150–$400 for a home inspection to identify upcoming repair needs
Safety Tips
- Never skip safety-critical repairs to preserve your fund balance. Electrical, structural, and plumbing issues can escalate rapidly.
- Keep a minimum emergency reserve of $1,000 in the fund at all times for urgent repairs.
When to Call a Professional
Consider consulting a financial planner if you are buying an older home with deferred maintenance and need help structuring a larger catch-up budget. A home inspector can provide a prioritized repair list to inform your savings targets.
Pro Tip
Use the 'big-ticket replacement' method alongside the percentage rule: estimate when your roof, HVAC, and water heater will need replacement, divide those costs by the years remaining, and add that amount to your baseline 1% annual budget.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using a general savings account instead of a dedicated fund, making it easy to raid for non-home expenses.
- Setting the budget too low — 1% is a minimum, not a target, especially for homes over 20 years old.
- Forgetting to account for seasonal costs like snow removal, lawn care, or pool maintenance.
- Not adjusting the fund when home value increases or after major renovations.
- Delaying repairs to 'save money,' which almost always leads to higher costs later.
Local Professionals in Daggett

Daggett Housing Market
Median Home Price
$429,900
Homes for Sale
3
Median Household Income
$47,813
Median Home Value
$95,400
Median Rent
$950/mo
Homeownership Rate
92%
Population
212
Median Year Built
1950
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 2023 5-Year Estimates
Fair Market Rents — Daggett
Studio
$697/mo
1 Bedroom
$771/mo
2 Bedroom
$973/mo
3 Bedroom
$1,353/mo
4 Bedroom
$1,380/mo
Source: HUD FY2026 Fair Market Rents — Menominee County, MI
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