Fat FIRE Calculator

Retire early with no lifestyle compromises — typically $100k/yr or more. Fat FIRE requires a larger portfolio, but gives you complete freedom. Find your Fat FIRE number and retirement age, free and instant.

Fat FIRE is early retirement with a high-spend, no-compromise lifestyle — typically $100,000 per year or more. It requires the largest portfolio, but gives you complete freedom: travel, dining, private healthcare, and any other spending you value.

See the formula & example
Formula: Fat FIRE number = annual spending ÷ safe withdrawal rate. At $100,000/yr with a 3.5% rate (common for long retirements), your target is $2,857,143. Enter your exact spending above for your personal Fat FIRE number.

All results are in today's dollars (inflation-adjusted).

ⓘ Educational estimates based on your inputs — not financial advice.

How Fat FIRE works

Fat FIRE uses the standard formula: FIRE number = annual spending ÷ safe withdrawal rate. Because Fat FIRE spending is $100,000/yr or more, the required portfolio is typically $2.5M–$5M+. Most Fat FIRE practitioners use 3–3.5% withdrawal rates (rather than 4%) for extra safety over a potentially 40–50 year retirement at high spending levels.

The high income required to save for Fat FIRE also often means a significant tax drag on withdrawals. The calculator lets you enter an optional tax rate on withdrawals to model your actual after-tax spending power.

Fat FIRE worked example

Morgan is 38, earns $220,000/yr, has $250,000 invested, saves $90,000/yr (41% savings rate), and wants to retire spending $130,000/yr. At a 3.5% SWR, the Fat FIRE number is $3,714,286. At 7% real returns with a 15% withdrawal tax, Morgan reaches it by age 54 — still early retirement with a fully unconstrained lifestyle.

Fat FIRE number by spending level

Annual spendingFIRE number (4% SWR)FIRE number (3.5% SWR)FIRE number (3% SWR)
$100,000/yr$2,500,000$2,857,143$3,333,333
$130,000/yr$3,250,000$3,714,286$4,333,333
$150,000/yr$3,750,000$4,285,714$5,000,000
$200,000/yr$5,000,000$5,714,286$6,666,667
$250,000/yr$6,250,000$7,142,857$8,333,333

Fat FIRE vs other FIRE types

TypeAnnual spendingTypical portfolioLifestyle
Lean FIREUnder $40,000/yr$625k–$1MFrugal, minimalist
Standard FIRE$40,000–$100,000/yr$1M–$2.5MTypical middle-class
Fat FIRE$100,000+/yr$2.5M–$7M+High-spend, no compromises
Barista FIREAny levelReduced by part-time incomeSemi-retired with income
Coast FIREAny levelLump-sum, then coastWork optional mid-career

Pros and cons of Fat FIRE

Pros:

Cons:

Fat FIRE — frequently asked questions

What is Fat FIRE?

Fat FIRE is early retirement with a high-spend, no-compromise lifestyle — typically $100,000 per year or more. Unlike Lean FIRE which requires frugality, Fat FIRE lets you maintain a premium lifestyle: travel, dining out, private healthcare, and any other spending you value.

How much do you need for Fat FIRE?

Using the Rule of 25 (4% rate): $100k/yr = $2.5M. $150k/yr = $3.75M. $200k/yr = $5M. Most Fat FIRE achievers use 3–3.5% withdrawal rates for a larger safety margin. Enter your target annual spending above to see your personal Fat FIRE number.

Can you reach Fat FIRE early?

Yes — with a high income and aggressive savings rate. If you earn $300k+ and save 40–60%, you can reach a $2.5M portfolio in 10–15 years. High-income professionals in tech, finance, and medicine are the most common Fat FIRE achievers. The calculator shows your exact timeline.

What withdrawal rate should Fat FIRE use?

Most Fat FIRE planners use 3–3.5% rather than the standard 4%. The Trinity Study covered 30-year retirements; early retirees spending $100k+/yr need their portfolio to last 40–50 years. A 3.5% SWR has near-100% historical success over that horizon and provides a meaningful buffer for market downturns. Set the withdrawal rate in the calculator to see the impact on your number.

Is Fat FIRE achievable on a normal salary?

It's very difficult at an average salary. Fat FIRE typically requires either a high income ($200k+/yr) and 30–40% savings rate, or a longer saving runway with compound growth. Some Fat FIRE achievers combine entrepreneurship, equity compensation, or real estate with a high savings rate over 15–25 working years. Use the calculator — enter your actual income and savings to see your honest timeline.

How much money do I need to retire early?

Does this account for inflation?

Is the 4% rule safe for a 40–50 year retirement?

What is a safe withdrawal rate (SWR)?

Last updated: June 2026