from
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Earning $60,000 and saving 25% puts you about 22.2 years from financial freedom.
Earning $60,000 and saving 25% puts you about 22.2 years from financial freedom. Numbers below assume a 7% real return and the 4% safe withdrawal rate.
Earning $60,000 and saving 25% puts you about 22.2 years from financial freedom.
If you earn $60,000 a year and save 25% of it, the math says you reach financial freedom in about 22.2 years. That means putting away $15,000 a year while living on $3,750 a month. At age 25 today, you would hit your number around age 47.
The freedom number for this scenario is $750,000. That figure comes from the 4% safe withdrawal rate, also called the Trinity rule: a portfolio 25 times your annual freedom spend can fund that spend roughly forever in most historical sequences. Here we assume a freedom-life budget of $30,000 a year, half your current salary, which is the band most middle-income FIRE plans land in once a paid-off house and lower taxes are factored.
The path uses one assumption that does most of the heavy lifting: a 7% real return on a stock-heavy portfolio. Bump that down to 5% and the timeline stretches by roughly 4 to 6 years. Bump it up to 9% and you shave off 3 to 5. Savings rate matters even more. At 25%, the wedge between earning and spending is the engine. Most people who reach freedom in under 20 years are saving 40% or higher; most who never reach it are stuck below 15%.
If this scenario looks slow, the easiest lever is expenses, not income. Cutting $500 a month from the budget here (switch to a cheaper apartment or refinance the mortgage) buys back about 3.7 years of working life. Two such cuts together usually compound into a meaningful chunk, because every dollar trimmed both raises savings and lowers the freedom target itself.
Run the calculator with your real numbers to swap in your own income, expenses, and starting balance. The result is yours in about twenty seconds, you get your three biggest expense cuts ranked by years saved, and you can share the score as a single link.
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7% real return (historical US equity average). 4% safe withdrawal rate (Trinity Study). Freedom number = target annual spend × 25. Default freedom-life budget for these scenarios is half the listed salary. Taxes and Social Security are not modeled. Subtract roughly 2 years per 1% lower you think real returns will be.