Free Lean FIRE calculator. Calculate how much you need for a frugal early retirement on $20K-$40K/year and see how quickly you can reach financial independence.
Lean FIRE is the minimalist path to early retirement — achieving financial independence on a lean budget, typically $20,000–$40,000 per year in living expenses. It's the fastest way to reach FIRE because the target portfolio is dramatically smaller than traditional or Fat FIRE.
While not for everyone, Lean FIRE appeals to people who value time freedom over material luxury. Living on $30K/year means you need just $750,000 invested (at 4% withdrawal), compared to $1.5M+ for a standard lifestyle. That difference can mean retiring 10–15 years earlier.
This calculator helps you find your Lean FIRE number, compare it to standard FIRE, and see how much faster the frugal path gets you to financial freedom. Lean FIRE focuses on covering essential expenses only, stripping out discretionary spending to reach financial independence as quickly as possible. The tradeoff is a more modest retirement lifestyle, but the benefit is reaching freedom years earlier. This calculator helps you find the minimum viable portfolio that sustains your basic needs.
Lean FIRE shows you the absolute minimum portfolio needed for financial independence. Even if you don't plan a permanently frugal retirement, knowing your Lean FIRE number reveals how close you are to having options — the ability to walk away from work if needed. Knowing the minimum viable number also provides a safety net benchmark even for those pursuing a more comfortable target.
Lean FIRE Number = Lean Annual Expenses / Safe Withdrawal Rate At 4% SWR: Lean FI = Lean Expenses × 25 Typical range: $500K–$1M (vs. $1M–$2.5M standard)
Result: Lean FIRE Number: $750,000 | Progress: 46.7% | ~7.8 years to Lean FIRE
At $2,500/month ($30K/year) lean spending and 4% SWR, the Lean FIRE number is $750,000. With $350K invested, saving $30K/year at 7% growth, you'll reach Lean FIRE in about 7.8 years. Compare: standard FIRE at $50K spending would require $1.25M and take ~16 years. Lean FIRE cuts the timeline nearly in half.
Lean FIRE isn't about deprivation — it's about intentionality. Lean FIRE retirees spend heavily on what they value (travel, hobbies, time with family) while ruthlessly cutting everything else. No keeping up with the Joneses, no lifestyle inflation, no spending on things that don't bring joy.
Location is the single biggest lever for Lean FIRE. Moving from San Francisco ($4,000/month) to a college town in the Midwest ($1,800/month) can cut your FIRE number in half. International geo-arbitrage takes this even further — many Lean FIRE retirees live abroad for significant periods.
While Lean FIRE math works at 4% withdrawal, having a buffer is wise. Options: (1) Target 3.5% withdrawal instead of 4%. (2) Maintain a 1-year cash buffer outside your portfolio. (3) Have a flexible spending plan that can drop 20% in bear markets. (4) Keep skills current for occasional freelance work.
Lean FIRE typically means living on $20K–$40K/year in retirement (for an individual or couple). The exact threshold varies, but the core idea is living below the median household spending. For a single person, under $25K is very lean; $25K–$40K is moderately lean.
Many people sustain Lean FIRE for decades. The keys: paid-off housing, low-cost healthcare access, no debt, and flexible spending habits. The biggest risks are unexpected healthcare costs and lifestyle inflation. Having a small side income or buffer fund addresses most concerns.
Lean FIRE targets minimalist spending ($20K–$40K/year, portfolio $500K–$1M). Standard FIRE matches median spending ($40K–$80K, portfolio $1M–$2M). Fat FIRE enables comfortable/luxury spending ($100K+, portfolio $2.5M+). Each trades time for comfort — Lean FIRE is fastest but most restrictive.
Many places globally and within the US. Domestically: Midwest towns, rural South, smaller cities in the Sunbelt. Internationally: Southeast Asia, Central America, Portugal, parts of Eastern Europe offer excellent quality of life at $1,500–$2,500/month. This is the "geo-arbitrage" strategy.
The 4% rule accounts for inflation — you increase withdrawals by CPI each year. However, Lean FIRE has less margin. If inflation spikes, there's less room to cut. Consider using a 3.5% withdrawal rate for extra safety, or maintain a small flexible spending buffer.
Absolutely. Couples often have an advantage because shared housing, utilities, and food cost less per person. A couple spending $35K/year needs $875K — achievable for two people saving aggressively. Many Lean FIRE couples spend $2,500–$3,000/month total.