Is the FIRE movement dead? In 2024, more people are catching on to the huge downsides of pursuing financial independence, retire early. Strict frugality, massive sacrifice, working harder than ever…is it really worth it to retire decades before everyone else? If you’re internally screaming, “Yes! Of course it is!” you’re in good company. Today, we’re talking about why FIRE is NOT dead in 2024 but why most Americans won’t achieve it.

It’s easy to claim that the FIRE movement is dead in 2024 when inflation has been high, savings rates are low, and there’s economic uncertainty all around. The problem? Almost all of that can be easily factored into your FIRE plan, and with some sacrifices, you could easily retire early in five, ten, or fifteen years. So, if FIRE is still possible, what must the average person do to achieve it?

We’ll discuss the mindset shift you must undergo to reach financial independence, the sacrifices you must prepare for, and what we would have done differently on our own paths to FIRE. Achieving financial freedom doesn’t need to be an all-out grind with zero enjoyment. Even if you make minor money moves today, you could be retiring YEARS earlier than you thought possible!

Mindy:
It goes without saying that in the last couple of years, life just costs more inflation is high and it’s harder than ever to keep your costs and expenses low. So what does this mean for the fire movement? Is it the end of early retirement? Today we’re going to find out. Hello, hello, hello and welcome to the BiggerPockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen, and with me as always is my young at heart co-host, Scott Trench.

Scott:
Great to be here. Mindy, you never miss a beat. Aw, yeah. You see I did there. Yeah. BiggerPockets has a goal of creating 1 million millionaires. You are in the right place here at BiggerPockets Money if you want to get your financial house in order because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone no matter when or where you’re starting or which financial influencers are telling you that the fire movement’s dead to get some clicks.

Mindy:
Ooh, that’s a good one, Scott, since today’s episode is called, is the Fire Movement Dead? Let me start off with you. Do you think the fire movement is dead? Nope. Alright, well that wraps up this episode. Just kidding. Scott, let’s go back to the beginning and let’s talk to our listeners about what the fire movement is, just very briefly and how it got started.

Scott:
Yeah, I mean where it got started. Wow. I think that the history of the fire movement, some people would maybe call it beginning with your money or your life, maybe Rich Dad, poor Dad, they might go back in time to richest Man in Babylon. They might even go back to Think and Grow Rich in the early 19 hundreds, maybe even before that. So this concept of building wealth has been around forever. The concept of financial independence retire early, I think really gained a lot of traction, or at least it appeared to me that it was really blossoming maybe in the early 2010s, maybe by 20 12, 20 13, 20 14. I think that an early mover that really kind of ballooned interest in financial independence, I got to give credit to Mr. Money mustache. Maybe it’s just my personal experience, but it seemed like a lot of people who got into this 10, 12 years ago when things really began to swell cite him as a source of inspiration there.
So I think that that’s kind of where I would say the groundswell really got going. Of course, he would never say he invented it. He will look up to Jacob l Fisker from Early Retirement Extreme, for example, as some of the folks that he would’ve learned from, I believe. But this thing has been going for a while and it’s evolved in the sense that people have taken the base concepts and found permutations and evolutions of it, right? 10 years ago there was fire, now there’s barista, fire, lean, fire, fire, chubby fire, fat fire, all these different coast fire, whatever. With all this, everyone’s taken it and made a spin or an evolution of it or whatever. Gen Z is going to completely reinvent it. They’re going to call it quiet quitting or whatever they call it. My daughter and Jen a will figure out a new term for it at some point. But this concept has been around forever and I think that that’s my perspective on the evolution of it at least.

Mindy:
Okay. I think that’s really interesting that you mentioned two books specifically Think and Grow Rich written by Napoleon Hill was not written in this century. It was written in 1937. The Richest Man in Babylon was written in 1926, and first of all, I love the Richest Man in Babylon. If you haven’t read this book, you absolutely should. It’s available in the BiggerPockets bookstore at biggerpockets.com/store. But also this book is, it is written in kind of Shakespearean language, which I love, and it’s nothing new. Well, maybe at the time it was new, but it was Spend Less Than You Earn. Invest wisely with people who know what they’re doing, prioritize saving, and for something to be 98 years old and still be relevant, that’s a timeless classic that is always going to be relevant and therefore the fire movement isn’t going to die because people are going to take the lessons from these books and all the other ones that you listed and the bloggers and the podcast and everything, and they’re going to be like, oh, I don’t have to work until I’m 65. I can work until I’m 65, but I don’t have to. And now a whole world just opens up. So with that in mind, how could this movement ever die? Scott, can you define fire?

Scott:
Fire is financial independence the feeling of one, being able to leave their job and stop working? Typically, this end state is phrased as achieving the 4% rule, which we’ve covered exhaustively on previous BiggerPockets money episodes. The 4% rule discusses, Hey, if you want to spend a hundred grand a year, you need to get 25 times that amount, 2.5 million so that you can withdraw 4%, $100,000 per year safely. And a large body of exhaustive research has been done on this. Bill Bangin did a study, Michael Kites did a study. We’ve had both of them on the podcast to discuss their approaches at length, which was the treat of a lifetime for Mindy and I because we’re huge nerds. The math is sound, but Mindy, why do you think a lot of these financial influencers are having podcasts and YouTube videos talking about how the fire movement is dead and getting clicks and comments that agree with them on these things? What is it that is They’re not debating the math. They’re not saying the 4% rule doesn’t work. Most of ’em with that, it’s something else. Why do you think this theme of the fire movement being dead is coming up? I

Mindy:
Think that people overwhelmingly just want a sure thing, and the 4% rule has a 4% margin of error, which is not why it’s called a 4% rule, but it has a 4% margin of error. If we had a 4% rule that had a 100% success rate, I think people would still question it because you’re thinking outside the box you’re doing, other people aren’t doing, and you are choosing to walk away from a job and live off of your investments, and that’s not the norm. The norm is to work until you’re 65, but you can retire early at 62 and a half. Who does that? Not a lot of people do that because there’s this one more year syndrome and there’s this what if syndrome and Oh, do I really have enough money? And yeah, the answer is probably yes if you’re retiring through the 4% rule, but why are people making articles and episodes about it to reassure people or for clickbait to freak people out? But I think it’s more to just keep answering the question because there’s so many people that just aren’t quite sure.

Scott:
Mindy, I think I got to be this very respectfully. I think you’re dead wrong.

Mindy:
Oh, well, I would love to hear what you have to say.

Scott:
What is fire? How do you achieve it? Right? Well, you earn a high income. These are people who earn a hundred plus thousand dollars a year, right? If you’re not on track to earn a hundred thousand dollars plus a year while it’s possible to achieve financial independence early, not likely. Those are outlier situations. Everyone’s looking for the story of the person who earns $50,000 a year, has no side hustle, has no luck, has no inheritance, has no friends, has no family to help them out to defray any expenses and does it completely on their own in a position of extreme lack of privilege. And while that exists, it just doesn’t happen very often. That’s not the story of fire, that’s not how it works in the world. Many people start in that position, but something goes right. They might have a real estate investment or a crypto investment or a stock investment or a career change or a business they start or whatever it is that powers them to financial independence.
And people I think struggle with the reality of either they’re going to have to do that and spend nights and weekends finding ways, reading books, working second jobs, sacrificing their life, the lifestyle that they want to live in order to accumulate wealth, or they’re going to have to earn a really high income and live way below their means for a very extended period of time, 5, 7, 10 years. And most people are not willing to do that. You and I are crazy enough to do that. You’ve live and flipped 15 times when I met my wife, she moved into my duplex that had no heater in it because it was April and I don’t need to heater in the duplex until October of course, because it’s Colorado. We got to Peter a few days later with this. But that’s kind of the mentality. I think that a lot of people who actually move along the path to fire have is they’re going to really burden on the income front or they’re going to really cut back on expense front or they’re going to find ways, again sort of on the income front to power assets like live in flips or whatever.
And people don’t want to do that and they realize they’re giving up a lot to get to fire. And I think that while the idea of fire sounds so great, that lived reality is not worth it to a lot of people and most people will never attain it, most people should never try and it’s only us money nerds that will actually get there and the benefits are absolutely worth it for us, right? Mindy, you approach the problem as people don’t believe the math because that’s how our brains work. Why wouldn’t everyone want this? But I don’t think that’s right. I think other people’s brains just work differently and they’re like that math, I’ll believe it all day, but the lived reality of spending Tuesday night reading another business book to get to 50 a year so that I can increase my income is not their idea of fun.
The idea of selling their car that’s $25,000 with a $17,000 note and then using that cash to buy an $8,000 car with $1,000 note is insane to them. The idea of selling their house and moving into a rental is not practicable, and those are the choices that lead people to financial independence. If you don’t make them and you earn a median income and you make no other changes, you will not achieve financial independence in an early fashion. You have to do them and you have to do it long after you’ve piled up $500,000 in assets to actually cross the border to true financial independence. And again, most people just aren’t willing to do that, and I think that is why there’s such a backlash against this is because so many people like the idea of it, but then the lived reality of grinding for five, seven or 10 years to achieve it, a different story. How’s that?

Mindy:
Okay, so you started off saying that they needed high income and I was like, oh, now look who’s dead wrong, Scott. You don’t necessarily have to have a high income, but you absolutely have to live differently than you have been if you haven’t been already accumulating a lot of money. So when Carl and I first discovered the financial independence movement, we really had to make zero changes because we were already doing all of the things. That’s just our natural way of spending money and our natural way of looking at the income that we had. We didn’t know that we could retire before age 65 until we stumbled upon this schmuck named Mr. Money Mustache who was like, yeah, you could totally retire early. And Carl’s like, this is such a scam, but it’s not. The numbers do work, math doesn’t lie, but you’re right that other people’s brains work differently.
Nobody wants to give up their comforts. I don’t know if you remember this, Scott, but several years ago you did a presentation on the concept of financial independence for work and somebody in just the employees of BiggerPockets and somebody raised their hand and said, but I don’t want to give up my comforts. I don’t want to give up all of these things. I’m young. I want to live my life. At the time I was like, oh, that makes me sad that you didn’t get the message of this conversation. But then on the other hand, that is absolutely 99% of Americans who aren’t in the fire movement, and I think a lot of, how do I say this? Non-fire movement. Americans like regular Americans aren’t thinking about, well, what I have is fine. They’re thinking about I need the bigger better thing. And to get that, you have to spend a lot of money and you have a great life, Scott. I have a great life. I don’t feel like I’m depriving myself of anything. Not anymore. That

Scott:
Phrase you threw in afterwards, is it?

Mindy:
Yes, not anymore.

Scott:
I have all the things I could ever want in my lifestyle at this point, and the reason I have that is because I spent 10 years living in duplexes, driving a paid off Corolla, not going out and spending money, making lunches, all those kinds of things to accumulate wealth. Working 80 hours a week here at BiggerPockets saying yes to every opportunity. I would literally show up at BiggerPockets. I would wake up in the morning, I would bike to work after making an omelet for myself on there, packed my lunch in my little bike bag, go to work at eight 30 work all day. Josh would not allow me be right for the blog and I wanted to hear myself talk just like I am right now on this. And so I would stay late from five to seven writing them for the blog. I would bike to rugby practice, I would attend rugby practice, I would bike home.
That was my day on the route I was listening to educational audiobooks. I did this for years right in a row. I’m sure other people have sacrificed way harder than that and are not able to get ahead, but that’s what I did. And many of my peers who had the same income levels at that point in time were not doing that same activity set. And that I think is it that sacrifice that 10 years we’ve had minority mindset Jaret on, and he talked about this, the decade of sacrifice. It’s that decade of sacrifice that there’s a backlash against and there should be, right? The fire movement should not be something that every American pursues, not every American can be early retired. Only those who are willing to go to create an extreme differential between their production and their consumption and invest wisely are going to have that opportunity to actually retire early. And it is a major, major sacrifice, and I think that is why there’s such a backlash going on against this, right? We do have to take a quick break to hear a word from our sponsors, but how can the average person achieve fire Today? We’re going to cover this and more when we return.

Mindy:
Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Money podcast. Let’s jump right back in.

Scott:
Another part of this fire is really great. I think that a lot of 20 somethings should go all out for fire, but I have a 2-year-old daughter right now and I don’t know if I would’ve house hacked. There’s no way I would’ve house hacked in the same environment that I lived in when I was first house hacking, right? We are not going to play gunshots or fireworks in the evenings during the summer with my 2-year-old daughter. That game’s not going to happen around all this. So that’s the difference, right? Is at 33 I’m not doing the same things and I shouldn’t and people shouldn’t do that. It should be a longer trajectory to fire and that’s more sustainable. And guess what? Burning the midnight oil working a second job, my daughter’s two now, she’s not going to be two in 10 years and I’m fire if I’m starting from scratch.
And so that’s another backlash is these parts of the journey that really require that all out are really great for people early in life in adulthood and maybe people that are trying to catch up to financial independence. A less extreme measures like rental property investing for example, are probably more appropriate for higher income earners in the midst of seeing their families come up. And I think that’s a pushback that’s happening here because very few people are achieving fire with a family of three kids in a middle class life because none of the things that really drive fire forward, like explosive career growth by burning the midnight oil or really extreme frugality and all these other things are congruent with that approach. There are plenty of exceptions, but that’s not the typical journey and those people are rightfully, I think, pushing back against fire and the extreme items rather it’s not good advice for them.

Mindy:
Now I’m going to disagree with you. You’re saying they’re pushing back against fire and rightfully so. I think you can still pursue financial independence and you should be pursuing financial independence just for the peace of mind and the big safety net that it gives you. I have been let go from jobs in the past. I say that it’s all happening all the time, two jobs and both times I deserved it. And one time I had the safety net of living with my parents because I was in my teens and the other time I had the safety net of being married to somebody who had a high paying job and we spent less than we earned. But if I had been on my own out in the world by myself living paycheck to paycheck and lost my job, I would be really, really in a pinch.
So pursuing the concept of having a big emergency fund, that’s also going to take time, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it just because it’s going to take time. Somebody they posted on one of my Facebook friends posted, I want to go back to college and change my career, but I’m already 46. I’m going to be 50 by the time I graduate. Okay, well, how old are you going to be in four years? If you don’t go back to college, you’re still going to be 50. So do what you want to do, pursue financial independence and don’t sit there and say, oh, well it’s not for me. I started too late

Scott:
And please my statement that when I say fire, I think what people are backlashing against is the more extreme approaches to fire that try to approach it in five, 10, maybe 15 years and a middle class family in their mid thirties starting from around scratch. They shouldn’t be in an unsustainable financial position. They should definitely be sacrificing to build an emergency fund where otherwise a job loss or something like that could disrupt their way of life. But I’m saying that person probably shouldn’t sell their house, move into an up and coming neighborhood, taking their kids into a new school to try to achieve a 50 plus percent savings rate. They should have a 10% or 15% savings rate at least, because if you have no margin to safety, that is going to be very disruptive to your family’s life potentially. That’s just a blowup waiting to happen for you.
So sound personal, finance and fire are different. I think 15 years to fire is a 50% savings rate that 17 years, right? For the fire math and there at the 4% roll of 7% returns on there. So 50% savings rate is really kind of that starting point for a lot of fire folks to achieve that may be unreasonable for huge portions of the American population that didn’t get there from an earlier standpoint. Some people may find it worth it, right? If you’re making 300 KA year and you want to live a middle class lifestyle, you can still achieve fire in there. You’re not going to live like your peers making $300,000 a year, but you live as well as most people in the country and still achieve fire. That could be well worth it, but I think that for a lot of middle class Americans that the extraordinary links one has to go to really rack rat up that savings rate are not congruent with what really matters in life, especially while you’re rearing kids or in your thirties and forties.

Mindy:
This sounds a little negative. I want to encourage people to look at their life, look at their spending, look at their savings, look at their income, look at what they want down the road. Scott Ricken in playing with fire challenged his wife to make a list of her top 10 things and her top 10 things did not include living by the beach. In fact, most of her top 10 things were really inexpensive and he’s like, then why are we paying so much money to live by the beach when this isn’t even in your top 10? Let’s change our life. Let’s take a drastic measure and move from Southern California up to Oregon so that we can be able to save more money and put more money away. I think that a lot of people who are just coming into the concept of fire are maybe not living like Carl and I were living, and it’s going to be a big shift. You don’t have to change everything at once, and I would encourage you not to change everything at once because that makes it a whole lot harder to stick

Scott:
To Mindy. I completely agree. Our show is to make financial freedom attainable for anyone no matter when or where they’re starting. We truly believe that. But I think what is happening, why we’re seeing this backlash against the fire movement with all of these influencers talking about this stuff is the fact that to get there, you have to make changes that are going to come at the expense of your current lifestyle to some degree, right? All of those changes you made, yes, they can be small, they can compound, but that’s what you have to do. And so I would caveat that for anyone regardless of when or where they’re starting if you want it, and I would say if you want it badly, fire movement I think is for people who want it badly and are going to find that combination of income, expense reduction, aggressive investment portfolios or businesses that’s going to go after it.
And I think that’s where people are realizing three years, 18 months, seven years into the journey, I’m going to lighten up. I don’t really want fire so badly that I’m going to continue to create this environment of artificial scarcity in my life to live below my means for me, totally worth it. For most people listening to this podcast on BiggerPockets money, totally worth it. There’s a huge advantages once you cross the line of fire early in life, especially the compounding effect is just ridiculous. And you can really, Mr. Mustache put this in an article 10 years ago, I didn’t really get it until now. It’s like money is like a tap water. You don’t waste it, but it’s just like you don’t obsess over it anymore because it’s just a resource when you need it. You turn on the spigot, you fill up your cup, you turn it, put it back, and you go there.
That’s what you want to get to. It’s a powerful, powerful feeling and it’s a very worthwhile reward for some other people may not want to go all out and absolutely, if you’re 35 and you’re not really willing to make all those changes in a good spot in your life or whatever, make some good personal financial decisions and in five, 10 years those can compound to get you very close to the finish line. Absolutely, we should do that. But that’s what I’m trying to say is I think the concept today is why is there this backlash? Why are people saying the fire movement dead? That’s my response to it at the highest level. Okay,

Mindy:
I’m going to give you one link that is a bit self-promotional. My husband has a blog called 1500 Days and he wrote an article in 2017 called My Death March to Financial Independence. He shares our story where it was just like this all out push, foregoing, everything fun, and it was not a really super awesome experience. I mean we still had fun, but it was this just push, push, push over and over again and I wish we would’ve done it differently because if you could get your financial independence journey down to eight years, but you had to give up all your fun stuff or you could work for another couple of years, take 10 years and have 10 enjoyable years, that’s so much better that I really wish that we would’ve done that. And that is one of my biggest regrets is that we just cranked it out instead of enjoying the journey.

Scott:
Alright, we got to take one final break, but stick with us more on fire in 2024. After this while we’re away, make sure to hit that follow button so you never miss an episode of BiggerPockets Money.

Mindy:
Welcome back to the show, Scott. Tagging off of that in this environment, how can the average person still achieve fire?

Scott:
Yeah, it’s the same approach as always, right? Fire is about building a sustainable long-term asset base, right? You’re trying to retire early, so if you retire in your forties for example, and you plan to live to be a hundred, because why wouldn’t you? You’re going to be fired, you’re going to be all you got, you’re going to be enjoying life and trying to do that. So you need resources to last 55 years. So whatever you invest in now has to last 55 years plus maybe even longer in most cases. And I think that people lose sight of that because they’re like, oh, the market’s overpriced or the real estate is overpriced. Well, no, it’s just are you going to accumulate 25 times you’re spending the investments at their simplest level just need to hold their value against inflation? If you earn no returns, just hold your value against inflation.
The 4% rule says if you have 25 times your expenses, you would run out of money in 25 years, so you only have to beat inflation by this tiny little sliver with your stock market or real estate or whatever or other investments. The game is really a function of income, less expenses and the investments need to be thought of as how they’re going to return over 10, 20, 30 years. Maybe the next decade is as bad as a lot of the pundits say, and the stock market goes nowhere. Real estate goes nowhere and other assets go nowhere. It doesn’t matter for someone starting out, you still have to get the spread between your income and expenses as large as possible and put it somewhere. And I think that’s the fundamental game that this comes down to and that’s the really hard part to get started.

Mindy:
That is the really hard part to get started, Scott, let’s say that our average person has gotten started and now they’re in the grind. How are they going to get through that grind? What advice do you have for the person in the accumulation phase?

Scott:
Again, I’m going to quote another Mr. Money mustache article from way back in the day here. He wrote an article, a reader submitted a question to the effect of, Hey, I feel like I’m doing all the right things. My income is relatively good, I got a good job. It’s stable, I have very low expenses, my car is paid off, I have no consumer debt. I shop at Aldi, I do all the right things. It seems like time is passing and the money’s piling, but what am I doing wrong? How can I accelerate this situation? And his response I think was Congratulations. That boring feeling of having everything optimized and automated and starting to accumulate is the feeling of getting rich. So the two problems for fire are getting that started, right? And this is work, right? It’s a year to get your expenses into a position where they’re as low as is reasonable for lifestyle you want to live.
It is years and decades to get to the career that you want. From an ideal perspective, it is years to really understand and intuit why you’re making the investment in portfolio decisions you’re making and then it’s just years of grinding it out on there. Those can happen concurrently in many cases and they do for a lot of people who pursue fire, but that’s it. And that’s the simple and super hard reality of this for a lot of folks. And by the way, there’s plenty of folks out there who do not have the privilege or the ability to go after fire in a practical sense in the near term. It might take them several years to get back into a position where they can begin to pursue something like this. But for everyone who does have that privilege, who has the option to cut back their lifestyle or option to take on more hours or increase income or whatever, that’s it. That’s the game I think. What do you think, Mindy? I

Mindy:
Think that that’s pretty spot on. I think that when you’re in the accumulation phase, you’ve gotten to the point where you’re kind of on autopilot, you are saving here and saving there. You’ve got your expenses pretty dialed in, and now’s the time to start thinking about what happens after you reach financial independence. I’m a big proponent of having a bucket list and put all sorts of interesting things on there, have it on your phone on a note taking app so you could just continue to add to it all the time, but also look into what’s on your bucket list and take time to enjoy that journey. And if you can take, let’s call an African safari something on your bucket list. It’s not on my bucket list, but maybe it’s on somebody else’s bucket list that’s 10, 15, $20,000 for an African safari. Maybe that’s not something you can afford today, but if you’re in year two of a 12 year journey, you don’t have to wait until year 12 to take that $20,000 trip either. So start looking at ways you can incorporate your bucket list items into your life along the journey. Many of your bucket list items will cost money, but many of them will be low cost or even free. So look for ways to take the low cost or even free items and start putting them in your life now so that your journey of 12 years is an enjoyable journey, not this death march to the end result where then you can start thinking about what you’re going to do.

Scott:
Mindy, how have the strategies changed to approach fire and what do you think the strategy is today?

Mindy:
Okay, so I think that when I first joined the financial independence movement back in 2012, it was all about frugality, keep your expenses low, take your income as high as you can and invest as much money as you possibly can into the stock market. Didn’t have, there wasn’t a lot of content around index funds, so we were doing individual stocks at the time, but it was all about how little could you spend. You look at the early fire bloggers, Jacob l Fisker from Early Retirement Extreme, I think he ate beans and rice every evening and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for lunch. And some people look at that and say, well, that’s not for me. I would rather live my life. Well, you don’t have to do it like that. He didn’t value delicious, amazing meals clearly because he’s eating beans and rice. I mean, beans and rice is great, but that wasn’t where his priorities were, so he didn’t put any money towards those.
Mr. Money mustache is also a huge proponent of being frugal, and he’s one of the biggest names in this space. So when you come to this space, you happen upon Mr. Money mustache and he’s telling you, I live off $24,000 a year. You could be like, maybe this isn’t for me. And I think now there’s more focus on living a healthy life, living your rich life, ramit, living a balanced life, incorporating more things so that your journey is enjoyable and it’s not so much let’s get to financial independence as fast as we can so that we can quit our jobs. It’s more let’s be conscious of where our money’s going. Let’s be conscious of our spending, let’s do some really great investing and let’s see what kind of life we really want. As opposed to the only way to retire is to retire early with a million dollars in the bank, and then you only spend 40,000 like you referred to earlier, there’s Lean Phi and Fat Phi and Barista Fi.
And Barista Fi means I have enough money that I only have to work a small job. My retirement is taken care of, and I don’t have to work full-time until that retirement matures. It’s similar to Coast Fi where you’re going to keep working, but your retirement, your traditional retirement age is secure and fat fi means I want to spend all the money that I want to spend and I am going to live this very luxurious lifestyle. So again, choose your own adventure and connect with the kind of life you want to have. I think that is really the main message now is what is your desired life and how can you take some of these principles to get there?

Scott:
I think there are four options. Spend less, earn more, invest or create, right? Those are the four things you can do to approach financial independence. And I think that investing was crazy the last 10 years, huge bull market. I think that income growth was correlated with that. Lots of people saw their incomes explode, and I think that wealth really enables someone to focus full-time on the creation of an asset like a business, a book, purchasing a business. Those types of things really enables those options. And I think that over the last 10 years there’s been a subtle but powerful shift away from frugality is the way to get going on the journey to financial independence. And yet I think what’s happening right now is people are realizing like I’m a little bit more skeptical of the market. Maybe that’s true. Maybe it doesn’t. The stock market, it’s a little harder to buy cashflow in real estate for all this.
Buying a business is a little harder when I can’t refinance my rental property or otherwise get access to liquidity without saving up tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. And so I think what’s happening here as well is frugality as all of the sudden quietly becomes so important to the strategy for those pursuing financial independence in today in 2024, that that’s creating a backlash because it’s relative power and moving people there is so incredible. I looked this up while we were talking here. I was like, I bought a Corolla in 2014 for $17,000, a brand new 2014 Corolla la, the fancy model, $17,000. If I buy the 2024 model today, it’s $24,000, so that’s a 25 ish percent increase in inflation. The used bicycle I purchased in 2014 around that time, which was my main mode of transportation, was $200 and a similar model goes for $200 today and requires no gas.
And so I’m like, okay, inflation is real, but for those who are serious about fire and those types of things, there are certain inflation you can’t avoid, right? Especially housing costs if you’re a renter for example, or food, healthy food, the kinds of things you want to do. There are certain types of fun and entertainment, but some of those expenses that are killing American household budgets are avoidable with major strategic choices at the beginning. And a focus on frugality is powerful and I think that people don’t like that because it requires a reduction in standard of living in there. So I would say that that’s what’s changed is it started with frugality. We’re kind of back there and that may be a reason for some of the backlash against fire in the last year or two.

Mindy:
Scott, you mentioned inflation, I mentioned inflation at the beginning of the show. Do you think people will start to need to adjust their retirement age goals and their retirement numbers due to the inflation that we’re seeing right now?

Scott:
Look, the 4% rule already bakes in inflation. Inflation is the reason we have the 4% rule because anything higher than 4%, there was periods in the seventies and eighties where inflation, even though the stock market and bonds actually returned reasonably well, inflation just eroded the actual real purchasing power. So the 4% rule incorporates inflation and it is not lower because high inflationary environments erode that. So it already factors that in if you have the 4% rule, you are able to retire per the 4% rule and you will not have run out of money for the next 30 years. You may have to pay some attention for the 4% of situations where your portfolio could diminish over 30 years. And if you don’t want it to diminish, you may need to supplement it with other sources of income and those types of things, but it already covers that.
That said, I think that again, inflation is the biggest driver if you want to protect against it still further, there are options for part-time work. There are ways I think about paying off your house inflation works, increases the value of the home, but it’s not going to increase your cost of living outside of the utilities, taxes and insurance around there. So you can defray some of those things. Paying off vehicles, for example, owning vehicles. So what are these expenses in your life that you can eliminate as you approach fire that make you a little bit more inflation resistant? And so those are the types of things I would be thinking about if you’re worried about inflation on top of the fact that the 4% rule already incorporates that consideration.

Mindy:
Yeah, I think that’s really important to note. The 4% rule takes into account inflation, and I mean I do this too, but I think a lot of people just read the headlines and they don’t dive deep into it. So I’m going to announce again, I have a copy of Bill Benin’s original 4% rule article that appeared in the 1996 print only version of the Journal of Financial Planners, or I think that was the magazine. It was difficult for me to find. I would love to share it with anybody. Email [email protected] and it will send you this so you can read it yourself. Bill Benen was a literal rocket scientist who then decided that he was going to be a CFP and he did the math, so you don’t have to. So definitely read that article if you have not already, give it another perusal if you still have read it and are not quite sure.

Scott:
Mindy, thank you for a wonderful discussion today. I think that the fire movement is not dead. It’s just always been for a small core of fairly hardcore people in this country who are willing to seriously delay gratification or move things forward, and it’s going as strong as ever among that cohort. I think a lot of people who thought they wanted fire are realizing, oh, maybe I don’t actually want to grind it out for a decade or two to achieve this, and I’m totally comfortable with retiring on a more normal trajectory by doing basic sound, personal finance, and that’s totally okay. I think that’s what we’re really seeing in the community here.

Mindy:
I am going to slightly disagree with you, Scott. I think fire is for everyone, but just not everyone will pursue it. I think that it could be for everyone, but yeah, you have to do the work or it’s not going to happen. I agree with you 100% that the fire movement is not dead, but I think it’s going to continually evolve, like you alluded to in the beginning, where you daughter is going to do things differently than we did, and that’s okay. She’s going to be conscious of money. She’s your kid. And that I think is the most important.

Scott:
If folks are not improving on the things that were done a few years ago, something’s wrong. So we love to see that everyone takes all these concepts and they make them their own and they improve upon ’em, and that’s what makes 2024 a wonderful time to be alive.

Mindy:
2024 is a wonderful time to be alive, and it’s a wonderful time to pursue fire. Alright, thank you so much for our dear listeners for listening to our show today. As a reminder, we do have a website with even more information about investing on it. If you’d like to learn more, go to biggerpockets.com. Alright, Scott, should we get out of here? Let’s do it. That wraps up this episode of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast. Of course, he is the Scott Trench and I am Mindy Jensen saying, take care, little Bear. BiggerPockets money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench. This episode was produced by Eric Knutson, copywriting by Calico Content, post-production by Exodus Media and Cris Mikkan. Thanks for listening.

 

 

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Note By BiggerPockets: These are opinions written by the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of BiggerPockets.



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