FIRE Number Calculator
Enter your annual expenses, current savings, and savings rate to calculate your FIRE number for Lean, Standard (4% rule), and Fat FIRE. See your progress bar and how many years you'd save by investing more each year.
What you spend per year in retirement
Historical S&P 500 real return ~7%
Lean FIRE
3.5% withdrawal
β
β years
FIRE (4% rule)
4% withdrawal
β
β years
Fat FIRE
5% withdrawal
β
β years
What if I save more? (vs. 4% rule target)
| Extra / year | Years to FIRE | Years saved |
|---|
Understanding Your FIRE Number
Financial Independence, Retire Early (FIRE) rests on a simple principle: once your investment portfolio generates enough in returns to cover your annual spending, you no longer need to work for money. Your FIRE number β the portfolio size needed β depends entirely on two variables: how much you spend and how much you safely withdraw each year.
The 4% rule is the most widely cited guideline: a portfolio of 25Γ your annual spending has historically sustained 30-year retirements with very high probability. If you plan to retire at 40 and live to 90, a 50-year window may call for a more conservative 3.5% rate (28.6Γ annual spending) β that's Lean FIRE.
The most powerful lever in your FIRE timeline isn't your return rate β it's your savings rate. Going from saving $20,000/year to $25,000/year can shave 3β6 years off your timeline depending on your starting balance. Use the sensitivity table above to see exactly how much each extra $1,000 of annual savings buys you in time.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a FIRE number? βΌ
Your FIRE number is the total investment portfolio you need to sustain your retirement spending indefinitely. It's calculated by dividing your annual expenses by your safe withdrawal rate (SWR). At 4% SWR: FIRE number = annual expenses Γ 25.
What is the 4% rule? βΌ
The 4% rule (the "Bengen Rule") states that a retiree can withdraw 4% of their portfolio in the first year of retirement, then adjust for inflation each year, and have a very high probability of not running out of money over a 30-year retirement. It's based on William Bengen's 1994 research using historical US market data.
What is the difference between Lean, Standard, and Fat FIRE? βΌ
Lean FIRE uses a 3.5% withdrawal rate β a more conservative approach for those living frugally or retiring early with a long runway. Standard FIRE uses the classic 4% rule. Fat FIRE uses 5%, implying a larger lifestyle budget or a higher risk tolerance for a shorter retirement period.
What annual return should I use? βΌ
The historical average real return (after inflation) of a diversified US stock portfolio is approximately 7% per year. For a global diversified portfolio, 6β7% is a commonly used planning figure. More conservative planners use 5β6% to account for sequence-of-returns risk.
Does this account for inflation? βΌ
The 7% default return already approximates a real return (nominal ~10% minus ~3% historical inflation). If you use a nominal return (e.g., 10%), your expenses should also be entered in nominal future dollars. For simplicity, use real return (7%) and today's spending figures.
What is Coast FIRE? βΌ
Coast FIRE is when you've saved enough that β without any further contributions β your portfolio will grow to your FIRE number by traditional retirement age (65+). You only need to cover your current expenses; you stop investing aggressively. A Coast FIRE calculator requires your target age, which this tool doesn't model, but the standard FIRE number is the same target.
How accurate is this calculator? βΌ
This is a planning tool, not a guarantee. It assumes a constant annual return and no sequence-of-returns risk. Real markets are volatile β a bad decade early in retirement can materially affect outcomes. For comprehensive planning, consider Monte Carlo simulations or consult a fee-only financial planner.