FIRE Number Calculator — Find Your Path to Financial Independence
Calculate the portfolio you need to retire early, see your projected FI date, compare your savings rate against the classic FIRE curve, and stress test the plan with Monte Carlo simulations.
Snapshot
FIRE number
$1,200,000
Years to FIRE
19.7
FIRE date
Nov 2045
The upgraded model now adjusts for tax drag, Social Security bridge years, and future lump-sum expenses without losing the fast interactive feel.
Your FIRE Number
$1,200,000
Years to FIRE
19.7 years
FI Date
November 2045
Current Savings Rate
40.0%
Monthly Retirement Budget
$4,000
Inflation-Adjusted FIRE Number
$2,146,084
Base FIRE Number
$1,200,000
Effective Real Return
7.0%
SS Bridge Reserve
$0
Future Expense Reserve
$0
Scenario compare and presets
Save the current setup as a benchmark, then test faster, safer, or more tax-aware versions without losing the baseline.
Save a benchmark to compare the impact of new assumptions side by side.
Budget editor
Tune your retirement lifestyle. The “Other” slice auto-balances so the total always equals your target monthly lifestyle budget.
Other
$300
Auto-balanced to keep the total exactly on target.
Current planned monthly total: $4,000
Difference vs. target monthly budget: $0
Monte Carlo stress test
Run 1,000 retirement scenarios to understand the chance your portfolio survives poor market sequences after you stop working.
FIRE number
$1,200,000
Years to FIRE
19.7y
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. It is a personal finance strategy focused on aggressive saving and investing so that your portfolio can cover all living expenses without requiring employment income. The standard FIRE formula multiplies your annual retirement spending by 25 (the inverse of a 4% withdrawal rate) to determine the target portfolio size needed to make work optional.
How This Calculator Works
The main FIRE calculator planning starts with one core question: how much portfolio capital must eventually replace your paycheck? This page answers that question by translating your spending target, investment return assumption, and withdrawal rule into a concrete capital requirement. The calculator uses monthly compounding instead of rough annual shortcuts, which matters because real portfolios grow and contributions land throughout the year. If you are learning the broader FIRE math for the first time, the quickest companion read is our guide on how to calculate your FIRE number, because it explains why spending is the engine behind every retirement target.
Under the hood, the main formula on this page is target portfolio = annual retirement spending divided by your withdrawal rate. From there, the calculator iterates month by month until your portfolio reaches the required threshold. That approach is more faithful than a back-of-the-envelope estimate because it captures the timing of contributions, compounding, and the nonlinear way returns accelerate once the portfolio gets larger. It also means small changes in monthly savings or return assumptions can shift your timeline materially, which is why the tool updates live as you move sliders and revise spending inputs.
For example, if you want to spend $48,000 a year and plan around a 4% withdrawal rate, the portfolio target is roughly $1.2 million before any Social Security offsets. The point is not that one formula can predict the future with perfect accuracy. The point is that a disciplined framework lets you compare scenarios on equal footing. When you change the withdrawal rate from 4% to 3.5%, or reduce planned annual spending by a few thousand dollars, you are not guessing anymore. You are seeing the capital effect directly and understanding which variables deserve your attention first.
Understanding Your Results
When the calculator gives you a FIRE number, it is showing the size of portfolio needed to make work optional under your current assumptions. The most important output is the headline target, but it is not the only one that matters. The years-to-retirement estimate shows how long your current system takes to close the gap. The FI date converts the abstract number into a calendar milestone, which is often more motivating than a raw dollar figure. The inflation-adjusted target reminds you that a million dollars today is not the same as a million dollars twenty years from now, even when you are using real returns for planning.
You should also read the results as a range of plausibility, not as a promise. A projection based on steady real returns can still be disrupted by sequence-of-returns risk, especially early in retirement when withdrawals begin. That is why this site pairs deterministic math with Monte Carlo analysis on the primary FIRE calculator. If the target looks achievable but the success rate is weak, the plan may be mathematically possible while still being too fragile for comfort. In practice, robust plans combine a realistic spending target, a conservative withdrawal rule, and enough flexibility to cut expenses or earn supplemental income if markets disappoint.
A good outcome depends on context. Someone targeting FIRE planning may gladly accept a leaner lifestyle for more freedom, while someone pursuing a longer or more luxurious retirement may intentionally choose a slower path. The correct read is not whether your timeline is fast or slow in absolute terms. It is whether the timeline fits the life you want and whether the assumptions leave enough margin for inflation, taxes, healthcare, and market volatility. The calculator helps you see those tradeoffs clearly so you can refine the plan rather than react emotionally to a single number.
How to Improve Your FIRE Date
If you want to reach this date sooner, first look at the gap between current spending and planned retirement spending, then check whether your contribution rate still matches your income growth. In most cases, the biggest improvement comes from raising your savings rate because that creates a double benefit: you invest more today and, by definition, you need less spending to support tomorrow. The second lever is expenses. Each recurring dollar you remove from planned retirement spending lowers the target portfolio by roughly twenty-five dollars at a 4% withdrawal rate, which is why housing, transportation, and location choices usually matter more than minor budgeting tweaks.
Returns matter, but they should be handled with humility. Chasing higher expected returns by concentrating risk is usually a mistake. A better approach is broad-market index investing, tax efficiency, disciplined rebalancing, and staying invested long enough for compounding to work. Geographic arbitrage can also be powerful if it fits your life. Moving from a high-cost metro to a lower-cost city, lower-tax state, or international destination can reduce both current spending and future retirement needs. The strongest FIRE plans are rarely built by one dramatic move. They come from stacking several sensible decisions that improve flexibility and reduce fragility over time.
FIRE Types Compared
There are several approaches to financial independence, each suited to different income levels, risk tolerances, and lifestyle goals. The table below summarizes the main FIRE strategies and what each requires at a 4% withdrawal rate.
| FIRE Type | Annual Spending | Target Portfolio (4% rule) | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lean FIRE | $25K–$45K/yr | $625K–$1.1M | Minimalists, geographic arbitrage |
| Regular FIRE | $40K–$80K/yr | $1M–$2M | Middle-income households |
| Fat FIRE | $100K+/yr | $2.5M+ | High earners seeking premium lifestyle |
| Coast FIRE | Current expenses only | Varies by age | Career flexibility, reduced stress |
| Barista FIRE | Partial portfolio + part-time income | Lower than full FIRE | Semi-retirement with benefits |
Portfolio targets assume a 4% safe withdrawal rate based on the Trinity Study (1998). Individual results vary based on withdrawal rate, investment returns, and retirement horizon.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need to retire early with FIRE planning?
The amount depends on your planned annual spending and withdrawal rate. The standard formula is annual expenses multiplied by 25 (based on a 4% withdrawal rate). For example, $50,000 in annual spending requires roughly $1.25 million. The Trinity Study (1998) found that a 4% initial withdrawal rate, adjusted for inflation, had approximately a 95% success rate over 30-year periods with a balanced stock/bond portfolio. For longer retirements of 40-50 years, many planners recommend targeting 28-33 times annual expenses instead.
Is $1 million enough to retire at 50?
Whether $1 million is enough depends on your annual spending and retirement length. At a 4% withdrawal rate, $1 million supports $40,000 per year. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average annual expenditure for U.S. households was approximately $72,967 in 2022, so $1 million alone may not cover average spending. However, if you can keep annual expenses below $40,000 through lower housing costs or geographic arbitrage, and especially if you have additional income sources like Social Security starting at 62-67, $1 million can work.
What is the 25x rule for retirement?
The 25x rule states that you need 25 times your planned annual retirement spending saved to retire safely. It is the inverse of the 4% withdrawal rule: if you divide your annual spending by 0.04, you get 25 times that amount. For example, $60,000 in annual spending requires $1.5 million. This rule originates from research by William Bengen (1994) and the Trinity Study (1998), which analyzed historical U.S. market data from 1926 to 1995 and found that a 4% inflation-adjusted withdrawal rate survived most 30-year retirement periods.
How does inflation affect my FIRE number?
Inflation directly increases the portfolio you need. If your FIRE number is $1.25 million today and you are 15 years from retirement, at 3% average annual inflation you would need approximately $1.95 million in nominal terms to maintain the same purchasing power. The Federal Reserve targets 2% inflation, but from 2020 to 2023 annual CPI inflation averaged closer to 5.4% according to BLS data. This calculator shows both real and inflation-adjusted targets so you can plan for purchasing power, not just account balances.
What is a safe withdrawal rate for early retirement?
The traditional 4% rule was tested for 30-year retirements, but early retirees in their 30s or 40s may face 50-60 year retirements. Research by Wade Pfau and others suggests that for retirement horizons longer than 30 years, a 3.25% to 3.5% initial withdrawal rate significantly improves portfolio survival. A 2024 Morningstar study recommended a 3.7% starting withdrawal rate for a 30-year retirement with a 90% success probability. Lower withdrawal rates require larger portfolios but provide a meaningful margin of safety against poor market sequences.
How long will $500,000 last in retirement?
At a 4% withdrawal rate, $500,000 supports $20,000 per year in spending. At a more conservative 3.5% rate, it supports about $17,500 per year. Whether this is sufficient depends heavily on your expenses, location, and supplemental income. Based on historical S&P 500 returns averaging approximately 10.3% annually since 1926 (about 7% after inflation, per NYU Stern data), a $500,000 portfolio with moderate spending has historically lasted 25-35 years in most scenarios. Monte Carlo simulations can show the probability distribution for your specific situation.