FIRE Calculator
Last updated June 2026
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your current age and your target retirement age to set your timeline.
- Input your current savings, annual income, and annual expenses to establish your financial baseline.
- Adjust the expected investment return, safe withdrawal rate, and expected inflation under Assumptions to match your investment strategy.
- Review your FIRE Number on the right -- this is the total portfolio value you need to retire.
- Check the FIRE Status card to see if you are on track to meet your target retirement age.
- Use the Summary section to see your savings rate, monthly savings needed, and projected portfolio value at your target age.
Calculator
FIRE Calculator
Calculate your Financial Independence, Retire Early number and see how quickly you can reach it.
Personal Details
Finances
Assumptions
FIRE Number
$1,125,000
The portfolio size needed to cover your expenses indefinitely
FIRE Status
4 years behind your target retirement age
Summary
Progress to FIRE
What is FIRE?
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. It is a movement that grew out of the personal finance community in the early 2010s, inspired by books like “Your Money or Your Life” by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez, and later popularized by bloggers like Mr. Money Mustache. The core principle is straightforward: if you save and invest a large enough portion of your income, you can build a portfolio that generates enough passive income to cover your living expenses indefinitely, freeing you from the need to work for money.
Unlike traditional retirement planning that targets age 65, FIRE practitioners aim to reach financial independence in their 30s, 40s, or early 50s. This is not about getting rich -- it is about achieving freedom. Many people who reach FIRE continue working on projects they find meaningful, start businesses, volunteer, or pursue creative endeavors. The “retire early” part is less about stopping work entirely and more about making work optional.
The math behind FIRE is surprisingly simple. You need to accumulate a portfolio large enough that a sustainable withdrawal rate covers your annual expenses. The most widely used benchmark for this is the 4% rule, which means you need roughly 25 times your annual expenses saved and invested. If you spend $40,000 per year, your FIRE number is $1,000,000. If you spend $60,000, it is $1,500,000.
The 4% Rule Explained
The 4% rule originated from the Trinity Study, a landmark 1998 research paper by three professors at Trinity University in Texas. They analyzed rolling 30-year periods of historical U.S. stock and bond market returns from 1926 to 1995. Their conclusion: a retiree who withdraws 4% of their portfolio in the first year and adjusts that amount for inflation each subsequent year has approximately a 95% chance of their money lasting at least 30 years, assuming a portfolio of 50-75% stocks and the remainder in bonds.
The mathematical relationship between the 4% withdrawal rate and the 25x multiplier is direct. If you withdraw 4% of your portfolio each year, you need 1 / 0.04 = 25 times your annual expenses. This is your FIRE number. For example, someone with $50,000 in annual expenses needs $50,000 x 25 = $1,250,000 to retire safely under the 4% rule.
It is worth noting that the 4% rule has limitations. It was designed for a 30-year retirement, and early retirees may need their money to last 50 or 60 years. Some FIRE practitioners use a more conservative 3.5% or 3% withdrawal rate to add a margin of safety. Others plan to be flexible with withdrawals, spending less during market downturns and more during bull markets. The calculator lets you adjust the safe withdrawal rate to model different scenarios.
Types of FIRE
The FIRE movement has evolved into several distinct approaches, each suited to different lifestyles, income levels, and comfort with frugality. Understanding these variations helps you choose a realistic target.
Lean FIRE
< $40K/yr
Retire on less than $40,000 per year in expenses. Requires a FIRE number under $1,000,000. Suits people comfortable with a minimalist lifestyle -- small housing, cooking at home, limited travel.
Regular FIRE
$40K-$100K/yr
Retire on $40,000 to $100,000 per year. FIRE number between $1,000,000 and $2,500,000. Supports a comfortable middle-class lifestyle with moderate discretionary spending.
Fat FIRE
> $100K/yr
Retire on more than $100,000 per year in expenses. FIRE number exceeds $2,500,000. Allows for a luxury lifestyle with travel, dining out, and premium housing without financial stress.
Barista FIRE
Semi-Retired
Save enough that part-time work covers the gap between portfolio income and expenses. Work a low-stress job for health insurance and supplemental income while your investments grow.
Coast FIRE
Growth Only
Save enough early that compound growth alone will reach your full FIRE number by traditional retirement age (65). You only need to earn enough to cover current expenses -- no more saving required.
Why Savings Rate Matters More Than Income
Most people assume that high income is the key to early retirement. In reality, your savings rate -- the percentage of after-tax income you save and invest -- is far more important than your total income. This is because savings rate simultaneously controls two variables: how much you invest each year and how much your portfolio needs to generate in retirement. A high earner with a low savings rate needs a massive portfolio and takes decades to build it. A moderate earner with a high savings rate needs a smaller portfolio and builds it much faster.
The relationship between savings rate and years to FIRE is not linear -- it is exponential. Going from a 10% to a 20% savings rate cuts your time to FIRE by roughly 15 years. Going from 50% to 60% cuts it by about 4 years. The early gains from increasing your savings rate are enormous because you are both reducing your required portfolio size and increasing your annual contributions.
Savings Rate vs Time to FIRE
10% savings rate = $20,000/year saved
FIRE Number = $4,500,000
Retires at age 81 (started at 30)
50% savings rate = $30,000/year saved
FIRE Number = $750,000
Retires at age 47 (started at 30)
The savings rate shortcut
This does not mean income is irrelevant. Higher income gives you more room to increase your savings rate. But someone earning $80,000 who saves 50% will always reach FIRE faster than someone earning $200,000 who saves 10%. The numbers simply do not lie. Focus on the gap between income and expenses, not on income alone.
Practical Ways to Increase Your Savings Rate
The three biggest expense categories for most households are housing, transportation, and food. Cutting costs in these areas has the largest impact on your savings rate. Consider house hacking (renting out rooms or units in your home), driving a used car or going car-free, and meal planning to reduce food waste and dining out. Even moving your savings rate from 20% to 35% through these changes can cut 10-15 years off your time to FIRE.
On the income side, the most effective strategies are negotiating raises at your current job, building marketable skills for higher-paying roles, and developing side income streams. Every additional dollar earned while keeping expenses flat goes directly to savings, improving your savings rate and accelerating your timeline. Many FIRE achievers used a combination of expense reduction and income growth to reach savings rates of 50% or higher.
Popular FIRE Scenarios
See how long it takes to reach FIRE at different income levels and target ages:
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the FIRE movement?
What is the 4% rule?
How much do I need to retire early?
What are the different types of FIRE?
How does savings rate affect time to FIRE?
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