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Home›Investing & Wealth›Building Wealth›Investing Basics

Financial Independence: Achieving FI and Retiring Early

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
7 sources7 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Financial Independence = Passive income >= Expenses; FI number = Annual expenses ÷ 0.04; $50k expenses = $1.25M portfolio needed
  • FI unlock freedom: At FI, you choose to work (not forced to), pivot careers, or retire; most find they continue working but on their terms
  • Savings rate is everything: 50% savings rate reaches FI in 17 years; 30% rate takes 28 years; difference is disciplined spending, not income
  • Geographic arbitrage: Earn in high-wage country (US), spend in low-cost area (Southeast Asia, Latin America); can retire on $20k-$30k/year globally
On this page
  • Defining Financial Independence
  • Calculating Your FI Number
  • The Impact of Savings Rate
  • Lifestyle Design: Expense Optimization
  • Geographic Arbitrage: Earn in One Place, Live in Another
  • Early Retirement Catch: Healthcare Before Medicare
  • The FI Mindset: What Changes
  • Worked Example: FI Timeline
  • Common FI Mistakes
  • Action Items: Plan Your Path to FI

Defining Financial Independence

Financial Independence (FI): Passive income >= your living expenses

You no longer need employment income because your investments generate enough to live on.

Example:

  • Annual expenses: $50,000
  • Investment portfolio: $1,250,000
  • Portfolio yield at 4% rule: $50,000/year
  • Passive income = expenses
  • You are financially independent

You can retire, travel, volunteer, or start a passion project. Your choice.

Calculating Your FI Number

FI Number = Annual Expenses ÷ 0.04

The 0.04 comes from the 4% safe withdrawal rule (spend 4% of portfolio annually without depleting principal over 30 years).

Worked example: FI calculation

You want to retire with:

  • Housing: $20,000/year
  • Living expenses: $15,000/year
  • Healthcare: $8,000/year
  • Discretionary (travel, hobbies): $12,000/year
  • Total annual expenses: $55,000

FI Number = $55,000 ÷ 0.04 = $1,375,000

You need $1.375M invested to sustainably withdraw $55k/year.

The Impact of Savings Rate

Savings rate is the primary driver of reaching FI.

Formula: Years to FI = 1 ÷ (Savings Rate × 0.02857)

Or more practically: Use the table below.

Years to FI by savings rate:

Savings Rate Years to FI
10% 66 years
20% 37 years
30% 28 years
40% 21 years
50% 17 years
60% 13 years
70% 10 years
80% 7 years

Worked example: Impact of 20% difference

Person A: 30% savings rate

  • Time to FI: 28 years
  • At age 55: Reaches FI

Person B: 50% savings rate (same income, lower spending)

  • Time to FI: 17 years
  • At age 45: Reaches FI
  • Difference: 10 years of freedom

The 20% difference in savings rate creates a 10-year difference in retirement date.

Lifestyle Design: Expense Optimization

FI is easier when expenses are lower, not when income is higher.

Two paths to same FI:

Path A: High income, high expense

  • Income: $200,000
  • Expenses: $120,000
  • Savings rate: 40%
  • FI number: $3,000,000
  • Years to FI: 21 years

Path B: Moderate income, low expense

  • Income: $100,000
  • Expenses: $40,000
  • Savings rate: 60%
  • FI number: $1,000,000
  • Years to FI: 13 years

Path B reaches FI 8 years earlier on HALF the income by controlling lifestyle.

Key expense reductions:

  1. Housing: $1,500-$2,000/month rent vs. $3,000-$5,000/month mortgage

    • Savings: $18,000-$42,000/year
  2. Transportation: Buy used car, no car payment, no luxury

    • Savings: $500-$800/month
  3. Food: Cook at home vs. eating out

    • Savings: $400-$800/month
  4. Subscriptions: Cut unnecessary streaming, gyms, memberships

    • Savings: $200-$500/month
  5. Entertainment: Free activities, travel hacking, off-season trips

    • Savings: $500-$1,000/month

Total potential savings: $2,000-$3,500/month or $24k-$42k/year

That's enough to shave 3-5 years off your FI timeline.

Geographic Arbitrage: Earn in One Place, Live in Another

Earn high US wages, spend in lower-cost countries.

Example: US remote worker

You work remote for US company: $120,000/year salary Live in Mexico (Playa del Carmen):

  • Housing: $800/month
  • Food: $400/month
  • Transportation: $200/month
  • Utilities/internet: $200/month
  • Entertainment: $300/month
  • Total: $1,900/month = $22,800/year

Savings: $120k - $23k = $97,000/year Savings rate: 81% FI in 8 years

Compare to US living:

  • Same $120k salary
  • US expenses: $60,000/year
  • Savings: $60,000/year (50%)
  • FI in 17 years

Geographic arbitrage cuts FI timeline in half: 8 years vs. 17 years

Low-cost FI destinations:

  • Mexico: $1,500-$2,500/month
  • Portugal: $1,500-$2,500/month
  • Vietnam: $1,000-$1,500/month
  • Colombia: $1,200-$2,000/month
  • Thailand: $1,000-$1,500/month

Early Retirement Catch: Healthcare Before Medicare

Critical issue: Healthcare from 55 (early retirement) to 65 (Medicare eligibility).

ACA (Affordable Care Act) options:

  • Self-employed health insurance: $400-$800/month
  • ACA marketplace: $300-$600/month (often subsidized)

Worked example: Healthcare cost for early retiree

Retire at 50, need health insurance until 65:

  • Years uninsured: 15
  • Average ACA cost: $500/month = $6,000/year
  • Total healthcare cost: $90,000 over 15 years

This must be factored into FI number:

  • Base expenses: $50,000/year
  • Healthcare (until Medicare): +$6,000/year (average, ages 50-65)
  • Adjusted FI number: $56,000 ÷ 0.04 = $1,400,000 (vs. $1.25M without healthcare buffer)

Healthcare is why early retirees often recommend $1.5M+ portfolio (not just $1.25M based on 4% rule).

The FI Mindset: What Changes

Reaching FI changes your psychology.

Before FI:

  • Work is mandatory (need income)
  • Spend money to feel better
  • Worry about job security
  • Stuck in job you dislike
  • Money anxiety

After FI:

  • Work is optional (choose to)
  • Spend intentionally (values align with spending)
  • No job security anxiety
  • Can leave bad situation immediately
  • Freedom anxiety (what now?)

The FI paradox: Most FI achievers continue working (but on their terms).

  • Some start passion projects
  • Some volunteer full-time
  • Some consult 20 hours/week (instead of 40)
  • Some travel while working remotely
  • Few truly "retire" and do nothing

FI isn't about stopping work; it's about having choice.

Worked Example: FI Timeline

Your FI plan (starting at age 30):

Goals:

  • Retire by 50 (20-year timeline)
  • Annual expenses: $50,000
  • FI number: $1,250,000

Plan:

  • Current income: $100,000
  • Current expenses: $50,000
  • Current savings: $50,000/year (50% rate)
  • Expected return: 8% annually

Projection:

Year 1 (age 30):

  • Contributions: $50,000
  • Growth: $0 (just started)
  • Balance: $50,000

Year 5 (age 34):

  • Accumulated contributions: $250,000
  • Growth: ~$100,000
  • Balance: $350,000

Year 10 (age 39):

  • Accumulated contributions: $500,000
  • Growth: ~$400,000
  • Balance: $900,000
  • FI number: $1,250,000
  • Remaining: $350,000

Year 13 (age 42):

  • Accumulated contributions: $650,000
  • Growth: ~$650,000
  • Balance: $1,300,000
  • FI achieved!

But you said age 50... Yes, you reach FI at 42 but continue working. Why? Options:

  1. Increase spending ($60k+ annually)
  2. Build larger buffer ($1.5M instead of $1.25M)
  3. Retire at 42 anyway (living modestly)
  4. Work until 50 and have $2M+ portfolio (flexibility in spending)

At 42 with FI, you have choice. That's the power.

Common FI Mistakes

Mistake 1: Too-low FI number

  • Calculated on current expenses only
  • Forgot healthcare, inflation, taxes
  • Result: Ran out of money in retirement
  • Fix: Use $1.5M minimum for early retirement, account for healthcare

Mistake 2: Inflexible lifestyle in FI

  • Capped spending at $40k/year for 30 years
  • Inflation means $40k in year 1, $80k in year 20
  • Hit 4% rule floor and had to cut spending
  • Fix: Use 4% rule as baseline, adjust for inflation annually

Mistake 3: Taking too much risk

  • Invested entire portfolio in stocks
  • Market crash at retirement
  • Can't buy stocks low
  • Fix: Before retirement, shift to 60/40 or 50/50 stock/bond mix

Mistake 4: Neglecting taxes in retirement

  • Traditional IRA withdrawals are taxed as income
  • Roth conversions create tax liability
  • Forgot about capital gains tax on taxable accounts
  • Fix: Plan tax-efficient withdrawal strategy

Action Items: Plan Your Path to FI

  1. Calculate FI number: Annual expenses ÷ 0.04
  2. Track current savings rate: (Income - Expenses) ÷ Income
  3. Calculate FI timeline: Use table above
  4. Identify expense reductions: Where can you cut 10-20%?
  5. Plan healthcare: If retiring before 65, budget ACA costs
  6. Stress-test portfolio: What if market drops 30% at retirement?
  7. Consider geographic arbitrage: Could you live elsewhere cheaper?
  8. Build 1.5x FI number: Extra buffer for healthcare, inflation, flexibility

Financial independence is achievable for most people making median income. It requires discipline, intentional spending, and time. The sooner you start, the earlier you reach it.

◆ Sources

  1. Mr. Money Mustache — FIRE Movement Guide
  2. FIREcalc — Historical Retirement Planning
  3. Cfiresim — Monte Carlo Retirement Simulation
  4. Early Retirement Forum — Community Discussion
  5. Federal Reserve — Historical Return Data
  6. NerdWallet — FIRE Strategy Guide
  7. Investopedia — Safe Withdrawal Rate Research
On this page
  • Defining Financial Independence
  • Calculating Your FI Number
  • The Impact of Savings Rate
  • Lifestyle Design: Expense Optimization
  • Geographic Arbitrage: Earn in One Place, Live in Another
  • Early Retirement Catch: Healthcare Before Medicare
  • The FI Mindset: What Changes
  • Worked Example: FI Timeline
  • Common FI Mistakes
  • Action Items: Plan Your Path to FI
◆ Related reading
  • What Is Diversification?
  • What Is a Stock?
  • What Is an ETF?
  • What is an index fund?
All Investing Basics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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