FIRE Calculator — Calculate Your Time to Financial Independence

Enter your portfolio and contributions, choose spending or a target number, and we’ll estimate your FI date and age. Private by design—everything runs locally.

Inputs

Results

Your FI number:
Today’s money:
Nominal at FI date:
Time to FI:
Includes monthly contributions and expected returns.
FI age:
Coverage today:
Current pot can support (at SWR):
/yr
Educational estimates, not financial advice. Consider fees, taxes, sequence risk, and changing markets.

How This FIRE Calculator Works (Plain-English)

We assume monthly compounding. In “Plan by spending (SWR)” we compute a real FI number as (spending − other income) ÷ SWR. To keep purchasing power, that real target is inflated to the projected FI date. We then project your portfolio from today’s balance using monthly contributions and your expected annual return. Time-to-FI is when the projection first meets (or exceeds) the nominal target. We show both “today’s money” and the nominal amount for clarity.

  • Portfolio growth: FV = P₀(1+r)^n + PMT·((1+r)^n−1)/r where r is monthly return and n months.
  • Inflation adjustment: target grows by (1+i)^{years} with annual inflation i.
  • SWR: adjustable (e.g., 3.5–4%). Lower SWR = larger FI number.

Tip: Try a cautious SWR and a range of return assumptions. Real life is lumpy; this is a planning compass, not a promise.

Understanding FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early): A Friendly Guide

FIRE is a simple idea with a lot of jargon around it: build a portfolio large enough that a small, sustainable withdrawal can cover your living expenses. When your investments can reasonably fund your lifestyle, you’ve reached Financial Independence—whether you keep working, change careers, go part-time, or retire early. Think of FIRE as a design problem: match reliable resources to the life you want, with a healthy margin of safety.

Your FI Number (Rule of Thumb)

A common shortcut is the Safe Withdrawal Rate (SWR). Estimate your required annual spending in retirement, subtract any expected reliable income (e.g., state pension later, rental net, annuities), then divide by a chosen withdrawal rate. Many people test 3.5%–4% for long horizons. For example, £24,000 per year at a 4% SWR implies a ~£600,000 portfolio in today’s money. A lower SWR (e.g., 3.5%) increases the FI number but adds resilience.

Real Money vs. Nominal Money

Your spending power matters more than the pound figure. This tool shows a “today’s money” FI number and a nominal target at your projected FI date. The nominal target grows with the inflation setting, so you’re planning to maintain purchasing power, not just hit a number on a screen.

What Drives Time to FI?

  • Spending: Every £1 of recurring spending requires ~£25–£30 in portfolio at a 3.3–4% SWR. Reducing needs is powerful.
  • Savings rate: A higher savings rate shortens time to FI dramatically (you’re adding more and needing less).
  • Investment returns: Long-term average returns compound; the range is uncertain year-to-year.
  • Inflation: Higher inflation means a larger nominal target at the FI date for the same real lifestyle.
  • Other income: Part-time work, small pensions, or guaranteed income can reduce the portfolio required.

Sequence-of-Returns & Flexibility

Markets are bumpy. The order of gains and losses, especially early in retirement, can alter outcomes (sequence risk). Flexibility helps: keep a modest cash buffer, trim discretionary spending in poor markets, and consider dynamic rules (e.g., skip inflation raises after a down year). The calculator keeps things approachable with fixed inputs, but real-life adjustments add resilience.

Common Pitfalls (and Easy Fixes)

  • Anchoring to 4% blindly: Treat SWR as a starting point. Try a range (3.5%, 4.0%) and note the impact.
  • Ignoring fees & taxes: They reduce net returns. Build a small margin or test lower return assumptions.
  • Underestimating spending: Track a few months of “essentials vs. flex” to set realistic targets.
  • No emergency buffer: Keep an easy-access cushion so surprises don’t force selling during downturns.

Your Levers (Practical, Calm Changes)

  • Boost savings rate: Automate contributions the day after payday; redirect pay rises and windfalls.
  • Right-size lifestyle: Big wins often come from housing, transport, and food systems, not tiny line items.
  • Extend compounding: A little longer to FI can materially increase safety.
  • Layer income: Part-time, freelance, or passion income post-FI reduces withdrawal pressure.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter current portfolio, monthly investments, expected return, and inflation.
  2. Pick a mode: By spending (SWR) or By FI number.
  3. Adjust SWR to your comfort; consider testing 3.5% and 4.0%.
  4. Review your FI number, time to FI, FI age, and the live chart.
  5. Experiment: nudge spending, contributions, returns, or other income to see what moves the needle most.

Educational only, not financial advice. Personal circumstances, taxes, account rules, benefits, fees, and market conditions vary. Use conservative settings, review yearly, and build a plan you can stick to calmly.

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