TAKEAWAYS
  • “3–6 months” is a starting point, not a calculation. It ignores how your business converts sales into cash.
  • Your reserve size is driven by cash conversion cycle, expense stability, revenue volatility, and access to capital.
  • Not all expenses are equal. Reserves should cover the expenses you can’t cut fast enough to avoid damage.
  • Use the bucketing method: Operating Cash (2 weeks), Reserve Cash (3–12 months of essential expenses), Tax Account (40% of net profit).
  • Cash Pulse™ sets a dynamic target based on current conditions — because risk changes month to month.

Everyone says “3–6 months.” That’s not a number.

Everyone says “keep 3–6 months of cash on hand.” Your accountant says it. Your banker says it. The internet says it.

But is that actually right for your business?

The honest answer is: it depends on factors most people aren’t measuring. And when you don’t measure them, the reserve “rule” becomes dangerous — it gives you false confidence right up until the moment you miss payroll.

The failure mode
Cash reserves aren’t about being conservative. They’re about staying alive during timing gaps, volatility spikes, and the weeks when reality ignores your forecast.

Why the “3–6 months” rule is wrong

Generic advice fails because it assumes all businesses have the same cash physics. They don’t.

  • It ignores your cash conversion cycle. A business that collects in 60 days but pays vendors in 15 days lives in a permanent cash gap. “3 months” may be reckless.
  • It doesn’t account for industry volatility. Seasonal demand, project timing, and customer churn change how quickly revenue can drop.
  • It ignores growth plans. Growth consumes cash before it produces cash. The same reserve can be safe at 0% growth and fatal at 30% growth.
  • It misses seasonal patterns. If your business makes its money in 4 months and bleeds in 8, a “monthly average” reserve is fantasy.
  • It treats all expenses as equal. They aren’t. Some costs can be cut in 48 hours. Others take months — and cutting them causes damage you can’t undo.
The point of reserves isn’t “months.” The point is: how many weeks of shocks can you absorb without breaking relationships, losing talent, or defaulting?

What actually determines your cash needs

Factor 1: Your cash conversion cycle

This is the first diagnostic. It answers a brutal question: how long do you fund the business before cash comes back?

Formula
Days Inventory Outstanding (DIO) + Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) − Days Payable Outstanding (DPO) = Days of working capital you must fund

If you collect in 60 days but pay in 15, you fund 45 days of operations. If your daily burn is $8,000, that’s $360,000 of working capital pressure — before “extra” reserves.

Industry examples:

  • Construction / project-based: cash conversion can run 60–120+ days (retainage, change orders, draw schedules).
  • SaaS: cash conversion can be 0–30 days (cards, annual prepay, low inventory).

Factor 2: Expense stability

Reserves exist to cover obligations you can’t interrupt without immediate damage.

  • Fixed expenses (rent, base salaries, insurance): predictable, but painful when revenue dips. These define your “floor.”
  • Variable expenses (inventory, commissions, subcontractors): scale with activity — but can spike at the worst time.
  • One-time expenses (taxes, annual insurance, license renewals): should live in a separate account so you don’t accidentally spend them.
Important
Reserve calculations should be based on the expenses you can’t cut fast enough to prevent operational damage — not your entire monthly spend.

Factor 3: Revenue volatility

Some businesses can predict next month’s revenue within 5%. Others can’t predict next week.

Practical ranges:

  • Seasonal businesses: 6–12 months (because you may need to survive the off-season or a bad season).
  • Project-based: 4–6 months (pipeline timing risk, delays, and payment terms).
  • Recurring revenue: 2–3 months (lower volatility, faster corrections).

Factor 4: Access to capital

Cash reserves and credit lines are not the same tool. But capital access changes reserve requirements.

  • Have a line of credit you can actually draw? You can hold a smaller reserve — if your borrowing base is stable and covenants aren’t fragile.
  • No credit access? Your cash reserve must be larger. There is no “backup system.”
  • Owner can inject cash? Count it only if it’s real, reliable, and doesn’t jeopardize personal solvency.
See your cash requirements → Take the Assessment
Cash Pulse™ flags the timing gaps that change reserve needs.

The bucketing method

Most owners fail at reserves because they keep “one pile of money” and call it safe. Then a tax payment hits, inventory spikes, or a client delays payment — and the reserve was never a reserve.

Use buckets. Separate purpose. Separate risk.

Bucket 1: Operating cash (2 weeks)

  • Covers immediate payroll, rent, critical vendors
  • Stays in checking
  • Replenished weekly

Bucket 2: Reserve cash (3–6 months of applicable expenses)

  • Not all expenses — only the ones you can’t cut immediately
  • Calculate: essential payroll + rent + critical services + minimum debt obligations
  • Kept in savings / money market, accessible in ~48 hours

Bucket 3: Tax account (40% of net profit)

  • Separate account
  • Untouchable until quarterly payments
  • Prevents “tax day surprise” and reserve contamination
Boundary rule
If money is “for taxes,” it is not “for reserves.” If money is “for reserves,” it is not “for inventory.” Buckets prevent self-deception.

How to calculate YOUR number

Here’s the method I use when diagnosing reserves for small businesses. It’s simple on purpose — the discipline is in honesty, not spreadsheet complexity.

Step 1: List your monthly expenses

Include payroll, rent, debt payments, insurance, software, vendors, inventory, taxes, and owner distributions (if they’re required for your household survival).

Step 2: Mark each expense as “essential” or “reducible”

Essential means: if you cut it, you damage the business immediately (service failure, lost talent, broken vendor continuity). Reducible means: you can cut within 30 days without catastrophic second-order effects.

Step 3: Calculate essential expense total

This is your reserve base. Most owners overestimate or underestimate it because they haven’t separated “nice to have” from “must have.”

Step 4: Multiply by your industry factor

Use this as a baseline, then adjust for your cash conversion cycle and volatility:

  • SaaS / Software: 2–3 months
  • Professional services: 3–4 months
  • Retail: 4–6 months
  • Construction / project-based: 6–9 months
  • Seasonal: 9–12 months
Reality check
If your cash conversion cycle is 75+ days, and your essential monthly expenses are $120,000, a “3-month reserve” may still fail — because the reserve must cover timing gaps and shock absorption.

What Helcyon measures: Cash Pulse™

Traditional reserve advice uses a static number based on the past. That’s why it fails when conditions change.

Cash Pulse™
Cash Pulse™ sets a dynamic reserve target based on timing, volatility, and the cash pressure growth creates — because cash risk is a moving target.

Cash Pulse™ factors:

  • Current cash conversion cycle (DIO / DSO / DPO)
  • Projected growth rate (working capital consumption)
  • Industry volatility score (demand swings, concentration risk)
  • Credit line availability (and whether it’s actually usable)
  • Seasonal patterns (cash drawdowns by month)
Cash Flow Diagnostics
See Your Cash Requirements
Stop guessing. Get a reserve target that reflects your cash timing, volatility, and growth pressure — not an internet rule.
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