FIRE Calculator:
Your FI Number, Savings Rate Impact, and Years to Financial Independence
Your FIRE number is your annual spending multiplied by 25 — the 4% safe withdrawal rule. Spending $60,000 per year means you need $1,500,000. Spending $40,000 needs $1,000,000. But the most powerful variable is not your target — it is your savings rate. At a 10% savings rate from zero, financial independence takes 43 years. At 25%, 32 years. At 50%, 17 years. At 75%, just 7 years. The compression between 50% and 75% savings rates is dramatic because raising your savings rate simultaneously accelerates your portfolio growth AND reduces your FIRE number target, creating a compounding double effect that is mathematically unlike any other single variable in personal finance.
Financial independence means having enough invested assets to cover your living expenses indefinitely — the point at which work becomes optional. Early retirement (the “RE” in FIRE) is optional once you reach financial independence; many FIRE adherents continue working in some form by choice, simply freed from the economic necessity that drives most employment decisions. The mathematical foundation of FIRE is straightforward: accumulate 25 times your annual spending (or equivalently, a portfolio from which you can withdraw 4% annually to cover expenses). The 4% “safe withdrawal rate” comes from the 1994 research by William Bengen, subsequently confirmed by the Trinity Study, which showed that a diversified stock and bond portfolio could sustain 4% annual withdrawals through any historical 30-year period including the Great Depression, the 1970s stagflation, and the dot-com crash.
The simplicity of the FIRE number formula — annual spending times 25 — masks the profound implications of how savings rate interacts with it. A person earning $100,000 who saves 10% ($10,000/year) needs $2,250,000 to replace 90% of their income at 4% withdrawal. A person earning the same $100,000 who saves 50% ($50,000/year) needs only $1,250,000 to replace 50% of their income. The first scenario requires 2.2 years of income to save $1 of FIRE progress per year; the second requires only 0.5 years of income per $1 of FIRE progress, and targets a FIRE number that is $1,000,000 smaller. This dual effect — simultaneously saving faster AND needing less — is why high savings rates compress the path to financial independence so dramatically.
The FIRE Number Formula, Safe Withdrawal Rate, and Coast FIRE Calculation
1. FIRE NUMBER (FULL FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE TARGET)
2. YEARS TO FIRE (SAVINGS RATE METHOD)
3. COAST FIRE NUMBER (STOP CONTRIBUTING NOW, LET IT GROW)
The Coast FIRE formula deserves particular attention because it reveals how dramatically the math favors early savers. A 22-year-old who needs $1,500,000 by age 65 (43 years) only needs $1,500,000 / (1.07)^43 = $1,500,000 / 19.6 = $76,500 saved by age 22 to coast to FI. This is achievable in fewer than 3 years at a good starting salary — then never contributing to retirement again and still retiring with $1.5M at 65. By age 30 (35 years remaining), the Coast FI number rises to $1,500,000 / (1.07)^35 = $1,500,000 / 10.68 = $140,500. By age 40 (25 years remaining), it is $1,500,000 / (1.07)^25 = $1,500,000 / 5.43 = $276,300. Time is the most irreplaceable variable in the FIRE equation, and Coast FIRE makes this concrete: every year of delay at a 7% return requires approximately 7% more saved today to achieve the same coast point.
Four FIRE Variants: Lean, Regular, Fat, and Barista FIRE
The Barista FIRE comparison in the fourth card reveals a mathematically powerful insight: reducing required portfolio withdrawals by $20,000 per year through part-time income eliminates $500,000 in required portfolio size (20,000 / 0.04 = $500,000). For someone accumulating capital, this $500,000 reduction in the target can shave 5-8 years off the path to partial financial independence, depending on savings rate and return assumptions. The “right” FIRE variant depends heavily on individual risk tolerance, spending flexibility, healthcare access (a critical US-specific FIRE consideration), and how meaningful work feels when it is optional rather than economically mandatory. Many practitioners who reach full FIRE numbers continue working in some form — the difference being that the work is chosen, not compelled.
Calculate Your Personal FIRE Number, Time to FI, and Coast FIRE Target
Enter your annual spending (or income and savings rate), current portfolio value, expected annual return, and target retirement age to calculate your FIRE number, years to financial independence at your current savings rate, and the Coast FIRE number that lets you stop contributing and let compound growth carry you to FI.
Open the FIRE CalculatorSavings Rate Impact: The Number That Changes Everything
The data reveals that savings rate improvements produce non-linear time compression as rates increase. Moving from 10% to 20% savings saves approximately 6 years. Moving from 50% to 65% savings saves approximately 6.5 years. Moving from 65% to 75% saves approximately 3.5 years. The compression occurs because at high savings rates, you are approaching an asymptote — theoretically, a 100% savings rate would mean zero spending and a FIRE number of zero, achievable instantly. In practice, 70-80% savings rates are the practical upper bound for most earners with housing, food, and healthcare expenses. The mathematical implication: every percentage point of savings rate matters more at higher savings rates than at lower ones, and the path from 40% to 50% savings has more time-compression value than the same 10-percentage-point move from 10% to 20%.
FIRE Numbers and Years to FI: $80K to $250K Income at Key Savings Rates
| Annual Income | Savings Rate | Invested/yr | Annual Spending | FIRE Number (25x) | Years to FI (7% growth) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $80,000 | 25% | $20,000 | $60,000 | $1,500,000 | 34 years |
| $80,000 | 50% | $40,000 | $40,000 | $1,000,000 | 18 years |
| $80,000 | 70% | $56,000 | $24,000 | $600,000 | 9 years |
| $120,000 | 25% | $30,000 | $90,000 | $2,250,000 | 38 years |
| $120,000 | 50% | $60,000 | $60,000 | $1,500,000 | 17 years |
| $120,000 | 70% | $84,000 | $36,000 | $900,000 | 9 years |
| $180,000 | 25% | $45,000 | $135,000 | $3,375,000 | 39 years |
| $180,000 | 50% | $90,000 | $90,000 | $2,250,000 | 17 years |
| $180,000 | 70% | $126,000 | $54,000 | $1,350,000 | 9 years |
| $250,000 | 50% | $125,000 | $125,000 | $3,125,000 | 17 years |
| $250,000 | 70% | $175,000 | $75,000 | $1,875,000 | 9 years |
| All calculations assume starting from $0 portfolio, 7% nominal annual growth, FIRE number = annual spending x 25 (4% withdrawal), and that spending equals income minus savings (pre-tax savings in tax-advantaged accounts). Actual years will be shorter with existing savings and may be longer with lower actual returns. Dollar figures are in today’s dollars; real return analysis (inflation-adjusted at 2-3% lower growth) would add 2-5 years to each estimate. Income shown is pre-tax; actual investable savings depends on your effective tax rate and post-tax income. | |||||
The most striking pattern in the table is income-invariance: a person earning $80,000 at a 70% savings rate reaches financial independence in approximately the same 9 years as a person earning $250,000 at a 70% savings rate. The absolute numbers are different — $600,000 vs $1,875,000 — but the time is nearly identical because the FIRE number scales proportionally with income at the same savings rate. This income-invariance is what separates FIRE math from conventional “save more money” advice: FIRE is fundamentally about savings rate, not income level. A teacher earning $60,000 who saves 60% of their income can reach financial independence faster than a surgeon earning $400,000 who saves 10%. The variable that matters most is the percentage, not the absolute dollar amount — though a high income with a high savings rate is the optimal combination.
Tax-Advantaged Account Strategy for FIRE: 401(k), Roth IRA, and HSA Sequencing
| Account | 2025 Limit | Tax Benefit | FIRE-Specific Advantage | Key Rules |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 401(k) / 403(b) Traditional | $23,500 ($31,000 if 50+) | Pre-tax contribution, taxable at withdrawal | Reduces current taxable income — powerful for high-income earners. Early retirees can use Roth conversion ladder to access before 59.5. | Mandatory distributions at age 73. 10% penalty before 59.5 unless using Rule 72(t) or conversion ladder. |
| Roth IRA | $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+) | After-tax contribution, tax-free growth and withdrawal | Contributions (not earnings) accessible penalty-free at any age. Ideal for early retirement. No mandatory distributions — can hold forever. | Phase-out at $150K-$165K (single), $236K-$246K (MFJ). Use backdoor Roth if above limit. 5-year rule for conversions. |
| HSA (Health Savings Account) | $4,300 self / $8,550 family | Triple tax advantage: pre-tax, grows tax-free, tax-free for medical | Often called “stealth IRA” for FIRE. Pay medical expenses out-of-pocket now, save receipts, reimburse yourself decades later from HSA. At 65, funds become ordinary withdrawal (like IRA) for any purpose. | Requires HDHP enrollment. Invested HSA (not just cash) provides stock market growth. Max out before taxable brokerage. |
| Roth 401(k) | Same as traditional 401(k) | After-tax contribution, tax-free growth | Better than traditional 401(k) if you expect higher retirement tax bracket. FIRE investors in low income years may be in lower brackets — model both scenarios. | No income limit (unlike Roth IRA). Employer match goes to traditional side regardless of your election. |
| Taxable Brokerage | Unlimited | Qualified dividends and long-term gains taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% | Critical for FIRE bridge: accessible without penalty before 59.5. Tax-loss harvesting, asset location optimization. Index ETFs are highly tax-efficient here. | LTCG at 0% for income under $47,025 (single) or $94,050 (MFJ) in 2025 — powerful for early retirees with managed income. |
| Optimal FIRE account sequencing: (1) 401(k) up to employer match (free money, always first). (2) Max HSA if eligible. (3) Max Roth IRA ($7,000). (4) Max remaining 401(k) ($23,500 total). (5) Taxable brokerage for additional savings. Roth conversion ladder: convert traditional 401(k) funds to Roth IRA during low-income early retirement years, then access converted funds 5 years later penalty-free. Rule 72(t) SEPP: allows penalty-free traditional IRA/401(k) withdrawals before 59.5 based on life expectancy tables — useful if conversion ladder is not preferred. | ||||
The HSA’s “triple tax advantage” — pre-tax contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free qualified medical withdrawals — makes it the most tax-efficient savings vehicle for FIRE investors who have access to a high-deductible health plan. The strategic approach: invest all HSA contributions in a stock index fund, pay current medical expenses out-of-pocket (building a “receipt vault” of reimbursable expenses), and let the HSA compound for decades. At retirement, you can reimburse yourself for any documented past medical expense from the HSA — tax-free — regardless of how old the expense is. A FIRE investor who maxes their HSA for 15 years at $6,000/year with 7% growth accumulates approximately $151,000 in the HSA, all accessible tax-free for healthcare costs in retirement. Given that the average 65-year-old couple is projected to need $315,000 for healthcare in retirement, an HSA-heavy FIRE strategy that pre-funds this need is financially highly efficient.
Savings Rate Impact: Years to Financial Independence from Zero
The growth bars make the non-linear nature of savings rate compression visually clear. Each 10-percentage-point improvement in savings rate below 35% saves roughly 5-7 years. Each improvement above 50% saves roughly 3-6 years per 10-point improvement. This is because at extreme savings rates, diminishing marginal returns set in — you can only compress the timeline so much before you hit the physical limits of how fast a portfolio can grow regardless of savings rate. The mathematical floor is approximately 5-7 years even with an infinite savings rate (if you spent nothing, you could only retire as fast as your existing savings plus one year of investing allows). The practical floor is around 5-7 years because even the most aggressive saver needs time for the portfolio to reach 25x their (already minimal) spending.
Sequence of Returns Risk: The Biggest FIRE Threat
Sequence of Returns Risk: Why Early Retirement Is More Dangerous Than Late Retirement
Sequence of returns risk is the danger that poor investment returns in the early years of retirement permanently damage a portfolio even if average long-term returns are adequate. A 40-year-old who retires with $1,500,000 and experiences a 40% market decline in year 1 (reducing the portfolio to $900,000) while withdrawing $60,000 (4%) now has a portfolio of $840,000 after the withdrawal. The subsequent recovery must happen from a base of $840,000 rather than $1,440,000 — a starting point 42% lower. If returns average 7% after the crash, the portfolio that started at $840K takes approximately 5 additional years longer to recover than the portfolio that avoided the crash. Mitigation strategies: (1) Build a 2-3 year cash or short-term bond buffer for early retirement expenses, avoiding forced stock sales during downturns. (2) Be willing to reduce spending 10-20% in severe market downturns (the “guardrails” method). (3) Consider a slightly lower withdrawal rate (3.0-3.5% instead of 4%) for retirements longer than 30 years. (4) Barista FIRE flexibility — the ability to earn some income in bad market years — dramatically reduces sequence risk. (5) Build a larger safety margin (FIRE at 25x but hold until 28-30x before retiring).
The Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Access Tax-Advantaged Funds Before Age 59.5
Early retirees face a structural challenge: most retirement savings are in traditional 401(k) and IRA accounts that impose a 10% early withdrawal penalty before age 59.5. The Roth conversion ladder is the primary solution. Strategy: in the early years of retirement (when income is low), convert $X from traditional IRA/401(k) to Roth IRA each year. Pay ordinary income taxes on the converted amount (at low or zero rates if total income is managed below the 12% bracket). After 5 years, the converted funds become accessible penalty-free as Roth contributions. Example: retire at 40, begin converting $40,000/year from traditional IRA to Roth. At 45 (5 years later), the first $40,000 of Roth conversions is penalty-free. Each subsequent year, another conversion tranche becomes available. In the meantime, live from taxable brokerage accounts during the 5-year waiting period. Important: start the ladder at least 5 years before you need to access converted funds. ACA healthcare subsidy consideration: Roth conversions count as income for ACA subsidy eligibility — manage conversions to stay below the cliff at 400% of federal poverty level to avoid losing subsidies.
FIRE Action Checklist: Steps to Financial Independence
Frequently Asked Questions: FIRE Calculator
What is the FIRE number and how do you calculate it?+
Your FIRE number is the portfolio size needed to sustain indefinite withdrawals at the 4% safe withdrawal rate. Formula: FIRE Number = Annual Spending x 25. Examples: $40K/yr needs $1,000,000. $60K/yr needs $1,500,000. $100K/yr needs $2,500,000. The 4% rule is based on William Bengen’s 1994 research showing a diversified portfolio could sustain 4% annual withdrawals through any historical 30-year period. For early retirement (40+ year horizon), consider 3.0-3.5% withdrawal rate, meaning a 28-33x multiplier. The FIRE number is the finish line, but the savings rate is the engine — a 50% savings rate gets you there in 17 years regardless of income level, while a 10% savings rate takes 43 years. Always include healthcare costs in your spending estimate, as employer coverage disappears at FIRE and individual ACA coverage can add $7,000-$24,000+ per year to annual expenses.
How does savings rate affect time to financial independence?+
Savings rate determines time to FI through a compounding double effect: it simultaneously increases annual contributions (faster accumulation) and reduces required FIRE number (smaller target). At $100K income from zero at 7% return: 10% savings = 43 years. 25% savings = 32 years. 50% savings = 17 years. 75% savings = 7 years. The math behind the compression: a 75% saver spends only $25K/yr (needs $625K portfolio) and saves $75K/yr. A 10% saver spends $90K/yr (needs $2.25M portfolio) and saves $10K/yr. The 75% saver is saving 7.5x more per year AND targeting a portfolio 3.6x smaller — the combined effect produces a 6x reduction in time-to-FI. Every 5-percentage-point improvement in savings rate above 40% saves roughly 1.5-3 years of working life. The most impactful levers: housing cost (often 30-40% of spending), transportation (often 15-20%), and food (often 10-15%).
What is Coast FIRE and how do you calculate your Coast FIRE number?+
Coast FIRE is the portfolio amount at which compound growth alone will reach your full FIRE number by target retirement age, without additional contributions. Formula: Coast FI Number = Full FIRE Number / (1 + annual return)^years until retirement. Examples at 7% growth: need $1.5M at age 65, currently 25 (40 years): Coast FI = $1.5M / (1.07)^40 = $1.5M / 14.97 = $100,170. Currently 35 (30 years): $1.5M / 7.61 = $197,070. Currently 45 (20 years): $1.5M / 3.87 = $387,596. Strategy: once you reach your Coast FI number, you can redirect savings from retirement investing to other priorities (paying off mortgage, education, travel) while still retiring on schedule. Many FIRE households use Coast FIRE as a “work optional” milestone — at Coast, you need your job to cover current expenses but no longer need it to fund retirement. This alone dramatically reduces work stress and increases negotiating leverage.
What are the different types of FIRE?+
Lean FIRE: $25K-$40K/yr spending, needs $625K-$1M. Extremely frugal lifestyle, typically in low cost-of-living areas. High sequence-of-returns risk with no spending buffer. Regular FIRE: $40K-$80K/yr spending, needs $1M-$2M. Most common target. Comfortable lifestyle with moderate flexibility. Fat FIRE: $100K+/yr spending, needs $2.5M+. Maintains high-income lifestyle through retirement. Lower relative risk due to larger portfolio buffer and spending flexibility. Barista FIRE: Semi-retire with part-time income. $60K needed but $20K from part-time work means only $1M portfolio required (covering $40K). The Barista FIRE variant that includes employer health benefits is particularly valuable for early retirees under 65. Coast FIRE: Accumulate enough that compound growth reaches FIRE number without additional contributions by target date. Reduces accumulation pressure and allows career downshifting. Chubby FIRE: Less formal variant between Regular and Fat FIRE, roughly $80K-$120K/yr spending, $2-3M portfolio.
How does the Roth conversion ladder work for early retirement?+
The Roth conversion ladder allows penalty-free access to traditional 401(k)/IRA funds before age 59.5. Strategy: in early retirement low-income years, convert $X from traditional IRA/401(k) to Roth IRA annually. Pay ordinary income taxes on the conversion (at low rates during retirement). After 5 years, the converted funds become penalty-free Roth withdrawals. Implementation: (1) Retire with 5+ years of taxable brokerage funds to live on during the waiting period. (2) Begin annual conversions in year 1 of retirement. (3) In year 6, access the first year’s conversions. (4) Each subsequent year, a new conversion tranche becomes available. Key consideration: manage total income (conversions + withdrawals + dividends) to stay within optimal tax brackets and below ACA subsidy cliffs. Many FIRE households target $50K-$75K in Roth conversions annually to efficiently fill up the 12% tax bracket while maintaining ACA subsidy eligibility below 400% FPL. Rule 72(t) SEPP (Substantially Equal Periodic Payments) is an alternative: allows fixed penalty-free withdrawals from traditional IRA based on life expectancy tables, but payments cannot change for 5 years or age 59.5, whichever is longer.
What is the safe withdrawal rate and is 4% still valid?+
The 4% rule originates from William Bengen’s 1994 research and the subsequent Trinity Study, which tested all 30-year rolling periods from 1926 to 1994 across stock/bond portfolios. Result: a 4% withdrawal rate survived 100% of 30-year periods for a 50-75% stock portfolio. The 2020 update (Cooley, Hubbard, Walz) extended through 2018 and confirmed the 4% rule for 30-year retirements. Current debate: (1) Valuation concerns: some researchers (Wade Pfau) argue that current high stock valuations suggest lower expected returns, making 3.0-3.3% more conservative. (2) Longer retirements: for 40-50 year early retirements, historical success rate at 4% drops from ~98% for 30 years to ~80-90% for 40-50 years. A 3.0-3.5% withdrawal rate increases success probability to 95%+. (3) Flexible withdrawal: the “variable withdrawal” or “guardrails” approach (reduce spending 10% if portfolio drops 20%, increase 10% if portfolio grows strongly) dramatically improves sustainability vs rigid 4% withdrawal. (4) ERN’s Safe Withdrawal Rate series suggests 3.25-3.5% for 40+ year retirements. Practical guidance: use 4% as your planning number but retire with a slight buffer (2-3 years extra) and maintain spending flexibility.
What about taxes in early retirement? What income will I owe taxes on?+
Early retirement can be extremely tax-efficient with proper planning. Income in early retirement typically comes from: (1) Taxable brokerage dividends and capital gains distributions: qualified dividends and long-term capital gains (LTCG) are taxed at 0% for income under $47,025 (single) or $94,050 (MFJ) in 2025 — many early retirees with managed income pay zero tax on investment income. (2) Roth IRA contributions: always penalty and tax-free, even before 59.5. (3) Roth conversions: taxed as ordinary income in the conversion year, then withdrawable tax-free after 5 years. (4) Traditional IRA/401(k) withdrawals: taxed as ordinary income. (5) Social Security: potentially up to 85% taxable depending on provisional income. Key strategy: in early retirement, design your withdrawal sequence to maximize 0% LTCG rate and low-bracket ordinary income by staying within the 12% bracket. A couple with $60,000 in spending can often pay near-zero federal income tax in early retirement by: drawing Roth contributions first (no tax), then LTCG from taxable (likely 0%), then Roth conversions to fill remaining 12% bracket. State income taxes vary: some states (TX, FL, WA, NV) have no income tax, making FIRE particularly attractive there.
Should I pay off my mortgage before reaching FIRE?+
The mortgage-versus-invest decision for FIRE seekers depends primarily on the mortgage rate versus expected investment returns, adjusted for risk preference and psychological factors. Mathematical analysis: if your mortgage rate is 3.5% (fixed, post-tax deductible cost approximately 2.8% for itemizers) and expected investment return is 7%, investing the extra payment money mathematically generates more wealth. If mortgage rate is 7%+ and risk-adjusted expected return is 5-6%, paying off is mathematically better. FIRE-specific considerations: (1) A paid-off home dramatically reduces monthly spending, which reduces the FIRE number AND provides sequence-of-returns protection in down markets (no forced asset sales to make mortgage payments). (2) Psychologically, entering FIRE without a mortgage is much more comfortable — reduced fixed expenses mean more flexibility during market downturns. (3) In a market crash scenario, a paid-off home never requires a payment. (4) Practical FIRE wisdom: many practitioners pay off the mortgage as one of their final FIRE milestones, accepting slightly lower mathematical returns in exchange for substantially reduced retirement risk. If rates are above 5.5%, pay off first. Below 4%, invest the difference.
How do I handle FIRE if I have irregular income (freelancer, self-employed)?+
Self-employed and freelance FIRE seekers have unique advantages and challenges. Advantages: (1) Solo 401(k) allows contributions up to $70,000 in 2025 ($23,500 employee + 25% of self-employment compensation as employer contribution up to the cap). This is far more than the $23,500 employee-only limit for W-2 workers. (2) Self-employed health insurance premiums are deductible (though not as flexible as employer coverage). (3) Business expenses reduce self-employment income for both income tax and self-employment tax (15.3%). Challenges: (1) Income variability makes savings rate planning difficult — use percentage-based saving rather than fixed dollar amounts. (2) Self-employment tax (15.3% on net earnings up to $176,100 for 2025) reduces actual take-home pay by more than W-2 equivalent salaries suggest. (3) No employer match (but the solo 401(k) employer contribution partially compensates). Strategy: (1) Target a savings rate on your net income after self-employment tax. (2) Max Solo 401(k) first, then SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k) Roth if eligible, then taxable. (3) Use a SEP-IRA (25% of net self-employment income up to $70,000) if simplicity is preferred over the slightly higher limit of solo 401(k). (4) In high income years, make extra contributions; in low income years, reduce contributions proportionally.
Key Takeaways
The FIRE number formula is simple — annual spending times 25 — but the savings rate is the variable that determines everything about the timeline. At 10% savings, financial independence takes 43 years. At 50%, 17 years. At 75%, just 7 years. The dramatic compression at high savings rates occurs because each savings rate improvement simultaneously increases annual investment contributions AND reduces the FIRE number target, creating a compounding double effect unavailable from any other single financial variable.
Three FIRE actions with the highest leverage: first, track and optimize spending, recognizing that every dollar cut permanently removes $25 from your FIRE number while adding $1 to annual savings; second, max tax-advantaged accounts in optimal sequence (401k match, HSA, Roth IRA, remaining 401k, taxable) to minimize the taxes that would otherwise erode compounding; and third, calculate and monitor your Coast FIRE number — the intermediate milestone where you can stop contributing and let growth carry you to FI, which often arrives 5-8 years before full FIRE and dramatically reduces financial stress and career pressure even before reaching complete independence.
Calculate Your FIRE Number, Years to Financial Independence, and Coast FIRE Target
Our FIRE Calculator shows your exact FIRE number based on current spending, time to FI at your current savings rate versus optimized scenarios, Coast FIRE number at any target age, and the account contribution sequence that minimizes taxes on your path to financial independence. For related analysis, see our house affordability calculator.
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