Financial Independence, Retire Early — FIRE — used to be a simpler conversation. Save 50% of your income, invest in index funds, retire in 15 years. The 4% rule did the rest. Higher inflation, higher rates, healthcare uncertainty, and a long bull market followed by sideways years have made the math more nuanced. The framework still works. The numbers moved.
This guide covers what FIRE actually requires in 2026, broken down by lifestyle level and the assumptions that matter most.
What changed in 2026
- The 4% rule (Trinity Study, updated through 2024 by Bengen and others) still survives historical backtesting at safe-withdrawal rates of 3.7%–4.2%, depending on assumptions.
- Healthcare costs for early retirees averaged $13,400 per couple in 2025 per Kaiser, up 6.9% YoY.
- Sequence-of-returns risk is more talked about than ever — early-retirement returns matter disproportionately.
The flavors of FIRE in 2026
- Lean FIRE: $625K invested for $25K/year. Requires a low-cost lifestyle.
- Regular FIRE: $1.25M for $50K/year. Roughly U.S. median household budget.
- Fat FIRE: $2.5M+ for $100K+/year. Comfortable upper-middle.
- Coast FIRE: save aggressively young, then coast. Covered separately.
- Barista FIRE: semi-retire with part-time work for healthcare and discretionary income.
How to calculate your number
- Step 1: Estimate annual spending in retirement (current spending minus mortgage if it'll be paid off, plus healthcare).
- Step 2: Multiply by 25 for a 4% withdrawal target.
- Step 3: Add a 20% buffer for healthcare and surprise costs.
- Step 4: Subtract any pension or expected Social Security PV.
- Step 5: That's your FIRE number, give or take.
1. Lean FIRE — best for low-COL movers
A single person spending $25K/year (rural, paid-off house, low-cost hobbies) needs about $625K. Achievable in 12–15 years on a $80K salary with a 50% savings rate.
The trade-off: very little margin. One catastrophic medical event or roof replacement can derail the plan. Lean FIRE works best with a paid-off home and an HSA balance.
2. Regular FIRE — best for middle-class achievers
$1.25M for $50K/year covers a comfortable middle-class lifestyle with vacations and meals out. Achievable in 18–22 years on a $120K household income at a 40% savings rate.
The catch: requires consistent saving through market cycles. Most failed FIRE attempts give up during a 30% drawdown.
3. Fat FIRE — best for high earners
$2.5M+ funds $100K/year. The math is easier in tech, finance, and medicine, where 50% savings rates on $250K+ incomes accumulate fast. Often achieved in 10–15 years.
The catch: lifestyle inflation is the main enemy. Earning $400K and saving $100K isn't fat FIRE — it's regular FIRE in 25 years.
Comparison: FIRE numbers in April 2026
| Type |
Annual spend |
Required portfolio |
Years to FI (40% save rate) |
| Lean FIRE |
$25K |
$625K |
12–15 |
| Regular FIRE |
$50K |
$1.25M |
18–22 |
| Fat FIRE |
$100K |
$2.5M |
22–28 |
| Coast FIRE |
Variable |
Less, depends on age |
5–10 |
| Barista FIRE |
$50K (with $20K work) |
$750K |
12–15 |
Common mistakes to avoid
Using current spending as retirement spending. Healthcare, travel, and home maintenance often go up. Mortgage and commute usually go down. The shifts don't cancel.
Forgetting taxes. A $1.25M portfolio doesn't yield $50K of spendable money — it yields $50K pre-tax. In a Roth-heavy portfolio that's fine; in a traditional 401(k) it's not.
Ignoring sequence-of-returns risk. The first 5–10 years matter disproportionately. A 30% drop in year 2 of retirement is far worse than year 22. Build a bond tent or cash buffer for the early years.
FAQ
Is the 4% rule still valid?
Yes, with caveats. Bengen himself recently suggested 4.7% for some scenarios. Most contemporary research lands at 3.7%–4.5% depending on equity allocation and time horizon.
What about healthcare before Medicare?
Budget $1,000–$1,500/month per person on the ACA marketplace, more if you don't qualify for subsidies. Subsidy rules change frequently — model conservatively.
Should I use Monte Carlo or historical backtest?
Both. Historical (cFIREsim, FICalc) shows real outcomes. Monte Carlo (Boldin, NewRetirement) tests probability ranges. Triangulate.
Where to go next
For related guides see Coast FIRE explained, How to invest $1,000 in 2026, and What 1% fees cost over 30 years 2026.