Back to tools

Seasonal Cash Reserve Calculator

Bank the right amount in peak months to survive the slow ones

Your numbers

$
%
$

1.0 = an average month. Raise summer, lower your slow season — whatever matches your business.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

Cash reserve target

Recommended reserve target$0Total projected cash deficit across slow months
Deficit months0 of 12
Recommended monthly savings during surplus months$0
MonthNet cash flow
Jan+$1,080
Feb+$1,080
Mar+$2,340
Apr+$3,600
May+$4,860
Jun+$6,120
Jul+$7,380
Aug+$6,120
Sep+$3,600
Oct+$2,340
Nov+$1,080
Dec+$3,600

Knowing you'll have a slow season is one thing. Knowing exactly how much cash to set aside during the good months to survive it is another — and it's the question most seasonal business owners never actually run the numbers on until they're already short. This tool turns your seasonal revenue curve into a concrete monthly savings target.

How the cash reserve target is calculated

Using the same seasonal curve model as the seasonal break-even calculator, this tool projects revenue for every month of the year, subtracts variable costs and your flat monthly fixed costs, and arrives at a net cash flow figure per month. Months where that figure is negative are deficit months — periods where normal operations alone don't cover costs. Add up every deficit month's shortfall and you get your recommended reserve target: the total cash cushion needed to carry the business through the predictable slow stretch without external financing.

Divide that target across your surplus months and you get a concrete monthly savings rate — how much of each good month's surplus should get set aside specifically for the reserve, rather than spent or reinvested immediately.

Why flat cash flow advice gets this wrong

Generic financial advice says "keep three to six months of expenses in reserve" — a rule of thumb built for businesses with roughly steady revenue. For a seasonal business, that generic rule either wildly overshoots (tying up cash that isn't actually needed) or undershoots (because it doesn't account for the specific shape and depth of your particular slow season). A reserve target built from your actual seasonal curve is sized for the problem you actually have, not a generic approximation of it.

Worked example

Using the same $360,000 annual revenue estimate, 58% variable cost rate, and $9,000 monthly fixed costs as the break-even example, applying a realistic seasonal curve shows several winter months running a negative net cash flow — say, a combined $14,000 shortfall across three slow months. That $14,000 becomes the recommended reserve target. Spread across eight surplus months, that's roughly $1,750 a month that should get set aside specifically for the reserve rather than treated as available profit.

Common mistakes and how to use this

  • Treating peak-season profit as fully spendable.A strong July doesn't mean July's entire surplus is available for reinvestment — some of it is really January's rent, paid early.
  • Building the reserve too slowly. Spreading the target evenly across surplus months is a reasonable default, but building it faster in the strongest months reduces the risk of falling short if a season underperforms.
  • Not revisiting the curve annually. Seasonal patterns shift — a growing reputation, a new competitor, or a changing neighborhood can all reshape your curve. Rerun this alongside the seasonal break-even calculatoreach year rather than assuming last year's curve still applies.

Frequently asked questions