What does FIRE mean?

Brunette 35 years old in a white T-shirt on the background of a green summer park
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FIRE says you can retire at 35 or even younger.

FIRE is an acronym that stands for "financial independence, retire early."

The idea behind it is that if you make the right lifestyle choices, you can save a significant amount of money — enough to retire much younger than the traditional retirement age of 65.

FIRE's true believers say it's possible to retire at 45. Or 35. Or even younger.

J.P. Livingston, who blogs at TheMoneyHabit.org, has made a name for herself with her story of how she was able to retire with $2.25 million — at the age of 28.

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How did FIRE start?

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FIRE was inspired by a 1992 book.

The FIRE movement traces its roots to Your Money or Your Life, a 1992 book by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez that popularized the concept of financial independence: having enough money to pay your bills so you don't have to work.

"You need not be resigned to devoting the majority of your waking hours to making money," says the book's introduction. "The nine-to-five grind may be the societal default, but you can steer your life down different highways — with off-ramps to your true calling and a more pleasing future."

Another writer who gets credit for stoking FIRE is Jacob Lund Fisker, author of the 2010 book Early Retirement Extreme. Fisker says he was able to retire at 33 from his job as a nuclear astrophysicist by saving a ton of money, then learning to get by on just $7,000 a year.

"The real problem is not how much we earn; it's how much we waste, perhaps to demonstrate our supposed wealth, when we spend it," he writes.

How are people saving enough to FIRE?

Cropped image of cute little girl and her beautiful parents cooking together in kitchen at home
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FIRE followers embrace frugal measures, like cooking all meals at home.

Though one popular rule says you should save 10% of your income for retirement, Fisker says he set aside 70% of what he earned. The FIRE movement has adopted saving 70% as the ultimate goal.

How do you do that? The FIRE faithful say it's simple: make more money, invest it well, and don't spend any more than you absolutely have to.

You might automate your savings during your work years, so the money is whisked out of your pay before you ever see it. Using an automated investment service like Wealthsimple can help diversify your investments and protect you from market gyrations.

You have to make sacrifices, too, like deciding you'll stop dining out or buying new clothes.

Livingston, the woman who retired at 28, tells CNBC she saved big by using a mind trick to keep expenses down: Before making any major purchase, she'd calculate how many hours she'd have to work to pay it off. And then she'd ask herself, Is it worth it?

What do critics of the movement say?

Suze Orman in LinkedIn Influencer Interview 2014
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Personal finance guru Suze Orman has been critical of the FIRE movement.

The FIRE movement has attracted some doubters, including personal finance icon Suze Orman — who is definitely not a fan.

"I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it," Orman said, when she was asked about FIRE by podcaster Paula Pant.

Orman says if you want to retire way early, you'll need $5 million, $6 million or maybe even $10 million, because you never know what life might throw at you. "You will get burned if you play with FIRE," she said during the interview.

But Pant is an enthusiastic FIRE supporter — "I love it, I love it, I love it" — and says that, as someone who achieved financial independence at 31, she was shocked by Orman's take.

"I believe the act of generating sufficient passive income that you have freedom from mandatory work is life-changing," Pant tells Money.ca.

She adds that she still works — in fact, harder than ever: "The difference is that I know I don't have to punch a clock in order to keep the lights on and the refrigerator full."

What can the rest of us learn from FIRE?

Dollar bills in glass jar on wooden table. Saving money concept.
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FIRE's principles — like saving all you can — can work for anyone.

Other followers of FIRE say Orman, who's worth a reported $35 million, doesn't seem to get that few people need an excessive amount of money to live on comfortably.

Or that insurance and an emergency fund can protect you from financial disaster. Or that financial independence doesn't necessarily mean complete retirement from all work, as Paula Pant knows.

The FIRE movement isn't for everybody, but it's hard to argue with its underlying principles:

  • Live below your means.
  • Save and invest as much money as possible.
  • Look for other income sources.
  • Think about and start planning for your retirement

That's a good course of action for leading a wise financial life — regardless of whether you dream of retiring decades earlier than most people.

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About the Author

Doug Whiteman

Doug Whiteman

Former Editor-in-Chief

Doug Whiteman was formerly the editor-in-chief of Money.ca. He has been quoted by The Wall Street Journal, USA Today and CNBC.com and has been interviewed on Fox Business, CBS Radio and the syndicated TV show First Business.

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