Find your Financial Independence number and years until you can retire early.
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. It is both a mathematical framework and a lifestyle movement built on a simple premise: accumulate enough invested assets that the passive returns cover your living expenses indefinitely, so work becomes optional. FIRE is not about sitting on a beach doing nothing — most FIRE adherents continue working in some form, but on their own terms, without financial pressure.
The movement has several variants. Lean FIRE targets a minimal lifestyle with lower expenses and a smaller portfolio. Fat FIRE targets a comfortable or even luxurious lifestyle, requiring a much larger nest egg. Barista FIRE involves semi-retirement — leaving full-time work and covering part of expenses through part-time work or a spouse's income. Coast FIRE means you have saved enough that, even without additional contributions, the portfolio will grow to your FIRE number by traditional retirement age.
FIRE calculations are built on the 4% rule, derived from the Trinity Study — a landmark 1998 paper by three professors at Trinity University. The study examined historical market returns and found that a portfolio of 50–75% stocks and 25–50% bonds could sustain annual withdrawals of 4% of the initial portfolio value (adjusted for inflation each year) for at least 30 years, in over 95% of historical 30-year periods.
This means your FIRE number — the amount you need to retire — is 25 times your expected annual spending. If you need $50,000/year, you need $1.25 million. If you need $80,000/year, you need $2 million.
At $60,000/year spending, your FIRE number is $1.5 million. Reducing spending to $50,000/year does two things simultaneously: it lowers your FIRE number to $1.25 million (saving $250,000 in required savings) and it increases your savings rate, letting you reach the lower target faster. A $10,000/year spending reduction can shave 5–8 years off the timeline.
Be honest and thorough. Include everything: housing, food, transportation, insurance, healthcare, travel, entertainment, and a buffer for irregular expenses. Your FIRE number must support your actual lifestyle, not an idealized version of it.
This is your FIRE number — the portfolio size at which a 4% withdrawal covers your annual spending. Some people use 3.3% (portfolio × 30) for extra safety, especially for early retirees with 40–50 year time horizons.
Your savings rate is the primary driver of your FIRE timeline. A 50% savings rate reaches FIRE in roughly 17 years regardless of income. A 70% savings rate reaches it in about 8.5 years. Income level matters less than the gap between income and spending.
Use 7% for long-term projections (historical real return of the US stock market after inflation). More conservative planners use 5–6%, especially for early retirees whose portfolios must survive 40–50 years.
If you retire early, Social Security is years away — but it will eventually reduce the withdrawal requirement from your portfolio. Some FIRE planners build two phases: a higher withdrawal rate before Social Security kicks in, lower afterward.