Quick answer: FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) requires saving 25x annual expenses. At $40K/year spending, you need $1M. Based on the 4% safe withdrawal rule. Achieve by saving 50-70% of income and investing in index funds. Variations: Lean FIRE, Fat FIRE, Barista FIRE, Coast FIRE.
The FIRE movement challenges the idea that you must work until 65. By saving an aggressive percentage of income and investing the difference, FIRE followers aim to reach financial independence in their 30s, 40s, or 50s. Here’s how the math works.
The FIRE Formula
FIRE Number = Annual Expenses × 25
This comes from the 4% rule: if you withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually, it should last 30+ years.
| Annual Expenses | FIRE Number | Monthly Investment Withdrawal |
|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $750,000 | $2,500 |
| $40,000 | $1,000,000 | $3,333 |
| $50,000 | $1,250,000 | $4,167 |
| $60,000 | $1,500,000 | $5,000 |
| $80,000 | $2,000,000 | $6,667 |
| $100,000 | $2,500,000 | $8,333 |
Types of FIRE
| Type | Description | Target | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lean FIRE | Minimalist lifestyle, low expenses | $500K–$1M | Frugal individuals |
| Regular FIRE | Comfortable middle-class lifestyle | $1M–$2M | Average earners with discipline |
| Fat FIRE | Luxurious or expensive lifestyle | $2M–$5M+ | High earners |
| Barista FIRE | Partially FI, work part-time | $400K–$800K | Those wanting flexibility |
| Coast FIRE | Enough saved to coast to normal retirement | Varies | Young investors |
Lean FIRE ($30,000-$40,000/year spending)
- FIRE number: $750,000-$1,000,000
- Lifestyle: Minimal spending, often in low-cost areas
- Challenge: Little room for error or lifestyle inflation
Regular FIRE ($50,000-$80,000/year spending)
- FIRE number: $1,250,000-$2,000,000
- Lifestyle: Normal middle-class living
- Most common target for FIRE practitioners
Fat FIRE ($100,000+/year spending)
- FIRE number: $2,500,000+
- Lifestyle: Travel, dining, generous budget
- Typically requires high income ($200K+) or long timeline
Coast FIRE
You’ve invested enough that compound growth alone will fund traditional retirement at 65, even without additional contributions.
| Age | Amount Needed to Coast to $1M by 65 (at 7% real return) |
|---|---|
| 25 | $131,000 |
| 30 | $184,000 |
| 35 | $258,000 |
| 40 | $362,000 |
| 45 | $508,000 |
After reaching Coast FIRE, you can work any job (lower-paying, more enjoyable) since you don’t need to save for retirement.
Barista FIRE
You have enough investments that a part-time job covers the gap. Example:
- Expenses: $50,000/year
- Investments: $800,000 (generating $32,000/year at 4%)
- Gap: $18,000/year from part-time work
- Part-time work also provides health insurance (critical before Medicare at 65)
How Savings Rate Determines Your Timeline
The most important factor for early retirement is savings rate, not income:
| Savings Rate | Years to FIRE (Starting from $0) |
|---|---|
| 10% | 51 years |
| 20% | 37 years |
| 30% | 28 years |
| 40% | 22 years |
| 50% | 17 years |
| 60% | 12.5 years |
| 70% | 8.5 years |
| 80% | 5.5 years |
Assumes 5% real investment returns and expenses equal to the non-saved portion of income.
A person earning $100,000 saving 50% ($50,000/year) reaches FIRE in the same time as someone earning $200,000 saving 50% ($100,000/year) — because both have the same ratio of savings to expenses.
The Math of FIRE: A Worked Example
Household earning $150,000/year, targeting $50,000/year spending
| Metric | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross household income | $150,000 |
| Taxes (estimated) | -$30,000 |
| Take-home pay | $120,000 |
| Annual expenses | $50,000 |
| Annual savings | $70,000 |
| Savings rate | 58% |
| FIRE number (25× expenses) | $1,250,000 |
| Time to FIRE (7% real return) | ~11 years |
Year-by-Year Projection
| Year | Annual Savings | Investment Growth (7%) | Total Portfolio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $70,000 | $2,450 | $72,450 |
| 2 | $70,000 | $9,972 | $152,422 |
| 3 | $70,000 | $18,170 | $240,592 |
| 5 | $70,000 | $36,800 | $440,260 |
| 7 | $70,000 | $58,400 | $672,580 |
| 9 | $70,000 | $83,600 | $944,200 |
| 11 | $70,000 | $112,800 | $1,263,500 |
Key FIRE Strategies
Reduce the Big Three Expenses
| Expense | Average American | Typical FIRE Practitioner | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | 33% of income | 20-25% | 8-13% |
| Transportation | 16% of income | 5-10% | 6-11% |
| Food | 13% of income | 8-10% | 3-5% |
| Total savings from Big 3 | — | — | 17-29% |
Investment Strategy for FIRE
Most FIRE followers invest in:
- 401(k) — Max out for tax benefits ($23,500/year)
- Roth IRA — Max out ($7,000/year)
- HSA — Max out if available ($4,300-$8,550/year)
- Taxable brokerage — Any remaining savings
- Asset allocation: 80-100% stocks during accumulation
Accessing Retirement Accounts Before 59½
| Strategy | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Roth IRA contributions | Withdraw contributions anytime (not earnings) |
| Roth conversion ladder | Convert Traditional → Roth, withdraw after 5 years |
| Rule of 55 | Access 401(k) penalty-free if you leave employer at 55+ |
| 72(t) SEPP | Substantially Equal Periodic Payments from IRA |
| Taxable brokerage | No age restrictions or penalties |
A common strategy: Live off taxable accounts in early retirement while doing Roth conversions, then access Roth money penalty-free.
FIRE by the Numbers: How Much You Need to Retire
The “25x rule” is the cornerstone of FIRE math. Based on the Trinity Study’s finding that a 4% annual withdrawal rate has historically survived 30-year retirement periods, your target nest egg is simply 25 times your annual expenses.
| Annual Spending | FIRE Number (25x) | Years to FIRE (saving 50% of $100K income) | Years to FIRE (saving 70%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $25,000/year | $625,000 | ~9 years | ~6 years |
| $40,000/year | $1,000,000 | ~13 years | ~9 years |
| $50,000/year | $1,250,000 | ~16 years | ~11 years |
| $75,000/year | $1,875,000 | ~21 years | ~15 years |
| $100,000/year | $2,500,000 | ~27 years | ~19 years |
Assumes 7% real annual returns. Results will vary with market conditions.
The most powerful lever in FIRE math is your savings rate, not your income. A household earning $80,000 but saving 60% will reach FIRE faster than a household earning $200,000 saving 15%.
Sequence of Returns Risk: The Biggest FIRE Threat
The 4% rule works over long historical periods, but it has a critical vulnerability: bad returns in the first 5–10 years of retirement can permanently deplete a portfolio even if the lifetime average return is fine.
Example: Two retirees both average 7% annual returns over 30 years.
- Retiree A gets strong early returns (+15%, +12%, +10%…) then weak ones: portfolio survives easily.
- Retiree B gets weak early returns (-20%, -15%, +5%…) then strong ones: portfolio may be exhausted by year 18.
This is why many FIRE practitioners add buffers:
- 3.5% rule instead of 4% — targets a $285,000 portfolio instead of $250,000 on $10K/year expenses
- Bond tent — hold 30–40% bonds entering retirement, shift back to stocks after 5 years
- Cash buffer — 1–2 years of expenses in cash/short-term bonds to avoid selling stocks in a crash
- Flexible spending — commit to cutting spending by 10–20% if portfolio drops 20%+ in first 5 years
The sequence risk concern is most acute for early retirees (retiring at 40–50) because their portfolios need to survive 40–50 years rather than the 30 years the Trinity Study modeled. Many FIRE researchers now suggest a 3.5% withdrawal rate for retirements lasting longer than 35 years.
FIRE and Health Insurance: The Real Cost
For traditional retirees, Medicare kicks in at 65. FIRE retirees often retire decades earlier and must purchase their own coverage.
| Coverage option | Monthly cost (couple, age 45) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ACA Marketplace (bronze) | $400–$700 | Subsidies available if income < 400% FPL |
| ACA Marketplace (gold) | $900–$1,400 | Lower out-of-pocket, higher premium |
| Health sharing ministry | $300–$600 | Not insurance; coverage limitations |
| COBRA (after leaving job) | $1,400–$2,200 | Only lasts 18 months |
ACA subsidy strategy: Many FIRE practitioners keep their income (dividends + capital gains + Roth conversions) below 400% of the Federal Poverty Level to qualify for ACA subsidies. For a couple in 2026, that threshold is approximately $79,000/year. This requires deliberate tax planning but can save $10,000–$20,000/year in premiums.
Common FIRE Criticisms
| Criticism | Counter-Argument |
|---|---|
| “You need a high income” | Savings rate matters more than absolute income. Coast FIRE/Barista FIRE work at moderate incomes |
| “What about healthcare before 65?” | ACA marketplace, part-time work with benefits, health sharing ministries, or budget for premiums |
| “What if the market crashes?” | The 4% rule survived every historical crash. Flexibility in spending adds more safety. |
| “You’ll be bored” | FIRE means freedom to pursue meaningful work, not forced idleness |
| “What about inflation?” | The 4% rule accounts for inflation. Your investments grow to keep pace. |
| “You’re depriving yourself now” | Deliberate spending on what matters vs. mindless consumption |
Healthcare: The FIRE Wild Card
Healthcare is the biggest variable cost for early retirees:
| Option | Estimated Annual Cost (Couple) |
|---|---|
| ACA marketplace (subsidized) | $0–$12,000 |
| ACA marketplace (unsubsidized) | $12,000–$24,000 |
| Part-time job with benefits | $0–$6,000 |
| Health sharing ministry | $3,000–$8,000 |
| COBRA (18 months max) | $12,000–$24,000 |
| Medicare (at 65) | $3,000–$8,000 |
Tip: Keep taxable income low in early retirement to maximize ACA subsidies. Roth withdrawals and long-term capital gains up to certain levels are taxed at 0%.
Your FIRE Readiness Checklist
- ☐ Know your annual expenses (track for 6-12 months)
- ☐ Calculate your FIRE number (expenses × 25)
- ☐ Know your savings rate
- ☐ Eliminate high-interest debt
- ☐ Max out tax-advantaged accounts
- ☐ Invest in low-cost index funds
- ☐ Build a Roth conversion ladder strategy
- ☐ Plan for healthcare
- ☐ Have a plan for meaningful activity in early retirement
- ☐ Consider a “practice” FIRE year (live on your planned budget while still working)
For more on FIRE strategies and numbers, see the FIRE hub.
For more on FIRE strategies and numbers, see the FIRE hub.
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