BiggerPockets Money Podcast - How to Reach FIRE Based on Your Income ($45K - $100K/Year)
Episode Date: October 1, 2024What does it mean to “win” financially in your income bracket? To us, the end goal is always FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early), and if you’re chasing financial freedom, this is the sho...w for you. We’re breaking down the money moves you need to make based on your income bracket, going from $45,000 to $100,000 per year, and how to stretch your dollar the furthest so you can invest, save, and reach FIRE faster. If you’re at the lower end of the income scale, we’ll give you time-tested methods to boost your income and use your time wisely so you can start stockpiling cash TODAY. If you have a high income, there’s still work to be done as you need to find the best way to keep the most of your income so you can use it to acquire wealth-building assets. Regardless of how much money you make, you CAN achieve FIRE if you know the proper steps. The good news? We’re sharing those steps today, so stick around! In This Episode We Cover How to speed up your path to financial independence based on your income bracket Why we disagree about retirement account investing when you’re just starting your career Ways to make more money and side hustles that can boost your income The headache-free vs. hands-on approach to investing for FIRE (and who should take which path) Lifestyle creep and avoiding overspending (EVEN if you have a higher income) How much money we reasonably think you’ll need to achieve FIRE And So Much More! Links from the Show Mindy on BiggerPockets Scott on BiggerPockets Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Join BiggerPockets for FREE Email Mindy: Mindy@biggerpockets.com Email Scott: Scott@biggerpockets.com BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Money 32 - Financial Freedom Through Small Life Changes and a Modest Real Estate Portfolio w/Planting our Pennies BiggerPockets Money 35 - Hacking Your Life to Live for (Almost) Free with Craig Curelop BiggerPockets Money 97 - Intentionally Choosing the Path to Financial Independence with Financial Mechanic BiggerPockets Money 110 - Systematically Increasing Income and Intentionally Decreasing Spending with A Purple Life BiggerPockets Money 169 - Breaking the Taboo of Talking About Money with Friends, Family, and Bosses w/Erin Lowry BiggerPockets Money 328 - The Best Alternative Investment No One Knows About w/Alex Breshears and Beth Johnson The One Thing How to Win Friends and Influence People The E-Myth Revisited The Go-Giver The Challenger Sale Learn Private Money Lending with “Lend to Live” Find an Investor-Friendly Agent in Your Area See Mindy and Scott at BPCON2024 in Cancun! FIRE in 2024: What We’d Do Differently If We Started Over Today (00:00) Intro (01:08) $45,000/Year Income (12:37) $75,000/Year Income (23:11) $100,000/Year Income (28:48) How Much for FIRE? Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-568 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Wealth building isn't just about how much you earn, but how much you save and invest, which is why today we're diving into a topic that I think is going to resonate with a lot of people, how to win financially, no matter what income bracket you're in.
Whether you're just starting out with a low salary, climbing your way up, or already earning a six-figure income, there are strategies that can help you reach your financial goals.
Hello, hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen,
and with me, as always, is my definitely in some income bracket co-host, Scott Trench.
Capital introduction, Mindy, just capital. Bigger Pockets has a goal of creating one million
millionaires. You are in the right place if you want to get your financial house in order
and achieve some capital gains because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for
everyone, no matter when or where you're starting. And today, we're going to discuss
how to make the biggest financial impact at $45,75, and $100,000 a year in income to propel you
on your financial independence journey. We're going to talk about what investment strategies
should stay the same between those three income brackets and what should be different as you
increase your income. Okay, Mindy, so let's start off with how you would approach a $45,000 per
year salary starting today. Okay, at the very beginning of the intro, I said,
wealth building isn't just about how much you earn, but how much you save and invest. And in the $45,000 tax
bracket, in the $45,000 income, you don't have a ton of opportunities to save and invest in large
amounts. I want you to first go back to the basics. You are likely at the more of the beginning
of your career and you have time on your side, which is.
is what I am assuming. I want you to max out your Roth IRA. The contribution limits for under 50,
2024 is $7,000. That is a little bit over $500 a month. I want you to figure out how you can
take $500 a month and put it into your Roth IRA. I think that would be a huge benefit for you
right now. I also want you to look at your company's 401k option.
Do you have a 401k? Do you have a 403B? If you're a government employee, you may have a 457 plan. So I want to know what your
company is offering as far as a match to your 401k because we are looking for ways to invest. And when your
company matches the money that you're putting into the account, we call that free money here.
I want you to take advantage of every free dollar you possibly can. So if you, if you're
If your company has a Roth 401k option, I think that's a great thing to look into as well.
It's got the difference between a Roth and a traditional account is that you pay the taxes now
on the Roth and then it grows tax-free and you withdraw it tax-free down the road.
So if you're 20, 25, 30 years old, you have a long runway for this to grow tax-free.
If you're 45, 50, 60, you don't have as much time for that to compound.
and grow in the Roth plans, you also might be making more money, in which case, reducing your
current taxable income could be your goal. That's what my goal is. But if you are making $45,000 a
year, let's say you're spending $25,000 or $30, you're paying taxes on it, there's just not a ton of
money left over, and I hate to say left over, to contribute to these accounts. Again, assuming that
you're a younger person, I'm going to encourage you to look at side income, side hustles,
so that you can generate more income to more easily fund that Roth IRA and potential 401K
contributions. Scott, what are your tips for people making $45,000 a year?
I'm going to get way more aggressive than what you just said there and say, look, if you're
making $45,000 a year, you're just getting started or something draft.
needs to change if you want to achieve financial independence because you ain't achieving
financial independence in a hurry making $45,000 a year. So the whole game becomes how do we
change the fact that you're making $45,000 a year, which is fundamentally incongruent with the
achievement of very early financial independence, like 10, 15, 20 years at minimum here.
So I would be throwing out a lot of the long term saving and investing advice. The question is,
how can we get expenses extremely low and build up?
up a cash position, which allows us to exploit the next set of opportunities, and how do we
gear up for the career pivot or entrepreneurial venture or house hack that can actually begin
exploding income? I was in this position to start my career. It's 23, making 48K a year.
That's more today adjusted for inflation, of course, than 45k. It's about 60K. But in that situation,
my day was I would get up, make my own breakfast, pack my own lunch, drive or bike to work in my
corolla if I was driving or on my $250 bicycle that I purchased from a coworker if it was a
nice day and I could bike. And in the evenings, as soon as I stopped, I would Uber or tutor or figure
out a way to earn side hustle income. And this way I saved up about 20K by living with a roommate
to be able to make the next big investment. So that's the goal. I would forget the Roth or the 401k
or whatever. And I'd just stick cash in a savings account because the problem isn't whether which
vehicle you're taking, the problem is that even if you saved all of the $45,000,
you wouldn't achieve fire in the next 10 to 15 years on that, unless you got pretty lucky
from an investment standpoint. So we need to increase that income. With that cash position and the
very low cost lifestyle, I would be looking for an opportunity within the next six months to a
year to dramatically accelerate that income. If that was in the current position, that's one thing,
but probably unlikely.
I'd be looking for a sales gig or an opportunity to go to work at a startup,
or I'd be thinking about the small business and a world and how to maybe acquire or get
into that if I could partner with somebody.
But I would be stockpiling cold, hard cash in the form of digital savings in the bank
account, of course, in the checking your savings account.
And I'd be looking to use that opportunity.
So example, what that could look like.
You earn $45,000 a year.
you try to save $10,000 to $15,000 of an emergency reserve, maybe 20, and then you go after
a house hack. The ideal house hack, I would say, in Denver, Colorado at this moment, or where I'd be
sniffing around for opportunity, is I'd be looking for a four or five bedroom house in a specific
part of town called Aurora near a medical campus. I have this all located. You should get this
specific for yourself over the next six months to a year while you study this in your market, wherever that is.
by looking for a four to five bedroom house with two to three baths, I'd be looking for a large yard that would enable or allow the option for an ADU to be constructed.
And I would be thinking about can I live in that house and rent out the other bedrooms?
Can I construct an ADU and live in that and Airbnb the house?
What are my options there to be able to provide a really good opportunity?
I'd also be looking at assumable mortgages in that particular area of town.
It may be different in yours.
There's a lot of assumable mortgages, which are perfect for somebody in this position because you don't
need as much income to qualify for an assumable mortgage if it has that last year's low,
you know, our 2021 or previous lower interest rate mortgages.
So I'd be getting really aggressive about those things and stockpiling cash to enable
myself to make that career or house hacking pivot because the investing doesn't make sense
at the space or it's way outweighed by the opportunities to switch career or house hack,
which the cash directly enables by giving you some cushion there.
So how do you feel about that?
Very different answer, Mindy.
I will agree to disagree.
I am still, I like what you're saying about stockpiling cash and taking advantage and, you know,
reducing your expenses.
You said you packed your own lunch.
You biked to work.
You did side hustles and you had a roommate.
I have heard story after story from people who aren't on the path of financial independence
who make $45,000, $50,000.
a year and go out to lunch every day because that's what all their coworkers do.
They drive to work in that brand new car that they bought for high school or college
graduation because they deserve it.
And they don't do side hustles because I'm in my 20s.
I want to live my life.
And they don't have a roommate because they had roommates all through college and they
just want to be by themselves.
And those are choices that they're making.
I'm not sure if those are choices that they're making.
consciously understanding the financial impact. I think those are choices that they're making
based on, you know, wants instead of needs. So I see where you're coming from. I love that advice.
I still want to go back to the Roth IRA. If you are young, you have so much runway to grow tax
free. That is a gift. Also get an HSA. But I think that the bottom line, Scott, is that income needs
to increase if you want to reach financial independence.
and at $45,000, there's just not a lot of extra to be putting into your wealth building,
which is why your tip about reducing your expenses is really, really, really key.
Stay tuned for more on how to change up your investing strategies with more income after a quick break.
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Let's jump back in.
I'm literally saying if you're trying to go retire traditionally, you can retire traditionally
by saving 10, 15% of that 45K salary.
and investing it in a Roth IRA.
Dave Ramsey,
Ramit, all these other great personal finance folks,
they're good resources for that,
and you should do that.
But if you're trying to fire,
if you're trying to retire early in 10 to 15 years,
don't do that.
Save a bunch of cash and use that to manufacture opportunities.
Don't blow the cash,
but just stockpile it for one year.
And I promise that if you couple that with reading 30, 50 business books,
in your spare time and tons of side hustles, the opportunities that emerge for you will be better
than a 10% stock market return on average around there for that.
Do I promise?
I don't know.
But I would way rather take that bet, and that's what I did when I was in that position.
And I think that it will pay off really handsomely to have that cash stockpiled rather than having
a little bit of money in that first Roth.
Again, if you're trying to get there very quickly.
There'll be time to catch up that Roth in 401K later when we really go after our income.
But that's a huge, like this, I'm literally suggesting that, you know, you go through 30 to 50 business books during this time period, side hustle a lot and really treat the situation of earning 45K as an emergency.
And that in the next year, that is going to be going up.
And there's going to be an opportunity set that will emerge that will allow me to make much more than that on a go forward basis.
if you want to fire well in advance of traditional retirement age. There's no really way around
how to fire with 45K. The answer is, and you'll find a lot of people here on Bigger Pockets Money
who fired starting from an income of $45,000. You're going to find very few who never
materially changed that starting point of $45,000. And that's also a frustration.
People say, oh, this person made $150K. Well, guess what? If you're capable of saving
30, 40% of $45,000 salary, and you read a bunch of business books and you listen to podcasts,
you will accumulate first tens and then hundreds of thousands of dollars in assets, maybe a million
dollars in assets. People who are capable and disciplined enough to amass and then effectively
manage a million dollars in assets often have job opportunities and can drive much more value
than that at businesses to earn more money. So this will all work together and compound. It just
needs to start with a major pivot and new orientation around that, I think, and the aggressive
accumulation of cash to seize those opportunities. Scott, now let's look at a $75,000 income. You're making,
I would say significantly more than you need to live off of, especially if you're able to live
off of this $45,000. I think you're making significantly more than you need to, like, bare bones live.
I know there's people that are going to say, oh, I can't live off 75. Okay, great for you.
But these are people who are living off of 75.
What would you do differently at a $75,000 income than you would or recommend at a $45,000 income?
So I think that the game has changed a little bit at $75,000 and it depends on the type of income, right?
So if you're a salesperson making $75,000, well, there's opportunity to really expand that.
And that changes the way I think about investing a little bit more than, for example, a teacher who may be making $75,000 between their base salary and
summer gig, for example, in there. If you're in the teaching profession, for example,
with that $75,000 in combined income and benefits, again, including a summer job, I know that
many teachers do not earn $75,000 per year, especially earlier in the career. But that's a case
where I would say, okay, now let's go down the ladder of these retirement accounts and say,
okay, how do I provide, how do I put this into tax advantaged accounts like the Roth, like the
401K, like the HSA? Take it, I know the teachers actually have different versions.
of those here. But I think that that's where I would be thinking about, I'm going to use these
tax advantage retirement accounts. Maybe in the off time, I'm going to be thinking about maybe a
real estate project every couple of years, save up some cash for that. But I'm going to be moving
down that stack and thinking, can I get to 30, 40% of the income? And yeah, you can probably
fire in about 17 to 22 years, starting from a standing position if you're able to save
30, 40, maybe approaching that 50% mark on that income, which of course will get.
easier as the investments pile on and add a little bit more income on top of that that base salary.
So that's one approach. If I'm going to be a little bit more aggressive about this and I'm in
more of that sales approach or I'm expecting my career to accelerate at a faster clip, maybe I'm,
you know, on a corporate finance track and I'm thinking that the 75K today should be bumping up
against 100,000 in three to five years. Okay, maybe now I'm actually thinking about this is the more
progressive period of my investment career. And I'm going to start saving up as much cash as possible
and getting a couple of those rental properties done now so that by the time I fire in 15 years or 10 to 15
years, I can, there'll be a little bit less, more lightly leveraged and producing a little bit more
cash flow. So that's how I'd be thinking about it in those kinds of maybe two different types of
scenarios, one that's a little bit more static, 75,000, and one that's more in a trajectory that's
moving me towards six figures or beyond.
I like what you're saying there.
Did you say index funds?
Because I think at 75,000 you should be starting investing in the stock market.
So let me put this.
I'll restate this.
If I'm in the more static progression in my career,
I'm not expecting my income to surge over the next two to three years.
Then I would be investing in index funds or thinking about those types of investments.
the decision about how to invest really depends on my aggression and timeline here.
Let's say that I'm a teacher and my pension is going to mature in 20 years.
Well, I'm probably not going to retire in 15 years, even if I'm capable of doing that
because I'm giving up one of the best assets of that profession.
I'm probably going to be thinking about a more passive approach that's going to get me there
with a lot less headache, maybe at that point I'm going to invest in index funds. If I'm in a more
aggressive pursuit of financial independence, and I don't have those types of timelines, and I
always want to get there as fast as possible, I'm probably waiting much more heavily towards
real estate in the early years, because real estate comes with the benefits of leverage and that
compounding, and I'm thinking about maybe if I'm going to take the 401k match, maybe I'll max that
HSA, but I'm probably going to be, if I'm having to make tradeoffs here, which most people
the $75,000 per your income range are going to have. I'm probably thinking if I want that portfolio,
you know, at my end state and maybe a million in real estate, maybe a million in stocks,
it's a great idea in my view to buy that real estate earlier in the journey because you get
the benefits of leverage. And by the time you want to retire, the portfolio will be de-leveraging
and you'll be able to get more cash flow from that as you've paid off the mortgage and as rent
growth has come on. So I would probably wait towards real estate first. And then as I
I get closer to financial dependence, really focus on that stock portfolio in these tax-advantaged
accounts.
We have to take one final break, but stick around for more on maximizing your income when we're
back.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full
financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing.
And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening.
That's why I like Monarch.
It helps you see exactly where your money is going.
And more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress.
Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier.
It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth,
and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your
Monarch subscription with the code pockets.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking.
You can see your budgets, debt pay-off, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
Every decision actually moves the needle.
Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple.
Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year.
That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets.
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Welcome back to the show.
I want to look at $75,000 a year. I'm thinking that your job has a little bit more
responsibility. So you have more obligations to be at work.
to be doing things for work, and you have less free time. I don't see side hustles as a really
big part of your wealth building journey at $75,000 and above. I see more, unless you have some
like rock star side hustle that is taking little time or, you know, easy to automate. I'm looking
more at passive income streams. The stock market.
is a great go-to, especially when you don't want to be doing real estate.
Syndications, if you can get a really great syndicator, if you can get a really great product,
if you can get a really great property, syndications are a great source of passive income.
I also really like private lending.
That's one of my favorite ways to generate some pretty good income.
There's short-term loans that I am doing like three-ish months.
we had the authors of Lend to Live, which is a Bigger Pockets book on the show a few months ago.
They both have different ways of looking at the way that they lend.
They lend.
One of them lends more to the person than the deal, and one lends more to the deal than the person.
I am definitely on person more than the deal side.
I typically lend only to people that I know can pay me back.
How much capital do you need to privately lend?
I have done many private loans at around $50,000.
Okay.
I have done private loans at higher amounts, but that is, I don't think that's necessary to get into private lending.
There's also a lot of ways that you can lend without being the middleman.
You hand the money to the middleman and they take care of it.
And that's a way to get into it at lower amounts.
You don't like private lending at $75,000?
I was just thinking, you know, I'm putting myself on the, I know, but you can, you can do this with less capital, but I'm just putting my hat on of, I earn less than $75,000. I'm listening. And I'm like, well, can I really actually buy a $50,000 loan on a rental property? Is that even possible? And then do I have the capital to do that in liquidity at that point in time? So I just wanted, I wanted to just kind of check in on that to see, you to for those who might think that it's less feasible to actually pull that off in that income bracket. Yeah. And that's a good point. You do have to have to
have some income to lend. You can't just be like, yeah, I'll lend you $50,000 and then like,
ooh, where am I going to get $50,000 from? I would, but I like that as a passive income source.
Again, you have to know what you're doing. You should definitely read that book and learn about
this process before you get into it. But I like the passive income streams at $75,000 and above.
The stock market. I am always going to be pro stock market. I have done very well in the stock
market. But again, in your $75,000 income, this is not a free-for-all spend whatever you want.
Keeping your expenses low, investing intelligently and with purpose. At $75,000 a year, you're working
with other people who are now saying, oh, I got this hot stock tip. There's no such thing as a hot stock
tip. Don't buy that hot stock. That's never going to work out. You're making a good income.
I wouldn't say this is fire income yet.
It's fire a ball, but your fire journey is going to be longer, especially with how much
you're spending.
If you can get your income or your expenses way down, again, house hacking, living in a low
cost of living area, having an older car, riding your bike to work, living close enough
that you can ride your bike to work.
There's lots of ways to cut down your expense.
so that you can save more.
Yeah.
Look, I think that a reality of fire that we probably need to just address is like even
at 45, at 45, let's take the 45 example.
If you just saved 100% of your income for 20 years, that's 900 grand plus the investment
returns, maybe you're getting to fire in 20 years.
It's just not enough income.
You just can't do it with that.
It has to change.
The income has to change if you want to fire.
Let's do the same example with 750.
in 10 years, you're going to save 750 grand.
If you saved 100% of that and paid no tax on it, it's still fundamentally the blocker for fire.
So you either have to be on a trajectory to increase that income there or begin taking much more risky or more aggressive or sacrifice investments or you have to sacrifice like the house hack.
So you're still in that position.
This is not an income level that will support rapid achievement of fire unless you're going to serial house hack, unless you're going to live.
unless you're going to live in flip, unless you're going to make big changes here.
But I'm still not in the position of saying that we can achieve fire with 75K in income
in a really robust timeline without continuing to make changes on those fronts.
You're looking at at least 20 years, I think even if you're saving 30, 40, 50% of that in the stock
market. And that's if things go well and the trajectory kind of continues to climb.
But I think that that's still fundamentally the issue here.
and that's how I'd be thinking about it even at at 75K.
I don't even know moving on to the next bracket if it changes that much at 100K here.
100K is now we're earning a pretty serious income.
And if we save 30 to 50% of that,
we're talking about maybe 30 to 40 grand a year after taxes, for example.
And that's going to take you, what, 400K, 800K,000 in savings over 10 years.
800K over 20 years. And that's a pretty, you're still living a very modest lifestyle at that
point in time on that income. So I think we continue in the fire journey to have this dependence
on these fairly high leverage investments. Remember, our goal here is to achieve a retirement
level of wealth way before most people. So 100K, we're starting to get this much more doable
if you do go down the traditional retirement stack ladder. I don't.
think you're going to be able to do it at 75,000. I think you're going to have to do the live
and flip like Mindy, for example, or whatever. You might be able to do it at 100, especially if
there are, like we mentioned earlier, good income jump opportunities. But now we're really flirting
with that border of, yeah, I think you could get pretty close in about 15 to 20 years if you had a
low cost of living and you went down the traditional, you know, you know, money.
guy or Dave Ramsey retirement planning stack. And he said, okay, I'm going to max out the
HSA. I'm going to take my 401 catch and then max out the 401k. I'm going to, if I can,
contribute anywhere else and maybe save a little bit in an after-tax brokerage account. You could
get there with a fairly passive investing strategy if you are really tight on the expense side
and consistent over a few, you know, a decade or two, at least a day, almost about two decades,
maybe two decades plus in this route. But I would still be thinking I need to layer in a couple of
fairly substantial bets or using my housing as a tool to supplement the journey to fire
even at $100,000 a year in income. I think it's still have to house hack, live and flip,
or think about some other side project like building a real estate portfolio in order to really
get there in a reasonable time frame. What do you think about that, Mindy?
want to agree with you, Scott, because I see $100,000 a year and I think, wow, that's a great
income. And it is a great income. But I don't really think that you're wrong. I'm trying to think
back to all the people that we have interviewed who got to a position of zero net worth and then
started building. And they reached financial independence within 10 years. And none of them made $45,000.
None of them made $75,000.
Some of them started there, but none of them finished there.
Started, yes, but they didn't finish there.
And I don't think many of them were only, and I do this in air quotes, only making $100,000.
They had two.
Now, I'm assuming that $100,000 is household income, not per person.
We've had several couples who have neither of them made more than $100,000 a year.
Yeah, neither.
But together, that's like $150 or $100.
$175,000 a year, which is a much more normal is not the right word.
I know people are going to email Scott at biggerpockets.com to tell him that they don't want me to say
it's a normal income.
But it's a much more normal to fie income at 175,000 than it is at 100,000.
It just takes a lot of money to reach financial independence because you are taking your 35-year
career or your 45-year career and you are compressing it. Well, if you're not going to make all this
money for 45 years, you're going to have to save a whole lot more in order to be able to
reach your financial independence goals. So I don't want to agree with you, but I think you're
right. I think even at $100,000 a year, you've got to focus on keeping your savings rate at
30, 40, 50, 60 percent. You need to avoid lifestyle creep, especially if you were in that
45,000 bracket and then increased to 100. Oh my goodness, I got it. I doubled my income. Now I can
spend more. No, you doubled your income. Now you can save more. Again, with the goal of early
financial independence, you will have to be saving more. And Rameet encourages you to enjoy your best
life, live your rich life. That's great. He's not wrong, but living your rich life and achieving
early financial independence is not really two goals that you can do at the same time.
You can live a great life while achieving financial independence. You can live a rich
life depending on what your definition of a rich life is and reach financial independence.
and I encourage you to enjoy the journey to financial independence,
but income is going to have to increase because your savings has to increase
because you are decreasing your timeline to get to retirement money.
Yeah, I think that that's right.
I think that's the problem with, again, you can get there.
I think $100,000 a year in annual income is the starting line for,
and let's define fire.
Let's define fire.
There's all these crazy things here.
You know, Jacob Lundfisker, early retirement extreme, living off of $7,000 a year out of a trailer.
That's not what we're about here.
That's awesome that he does that.
That's not what you're probably listening to Bigger Pockets money in order to achieve.
Fire for, I think, the vast majority of listeners, I said this before, I've never gotten challenged on it.
Please do challenge me, if you disagree, is $1.5 to $2.5 million, depending on where you're located.
So when we say that, when we frame that goal, that makes it a little bit more clear.
that again, 100K is just not going to cut it in terms of firing in a reasonable amount of time.
You can get there by 55 if you want, if you're starting at 20, 25 in there.
Like, that's possible with 100K.
But we still got to supplement at all three of these income levels with them.
45K is so little income relative to the needs for fire that the game has to be around.
How do I dramatically increase my income?
at 75k we're still kind of there but we need you know but we can get there if we're able to have
enough side pursuits that can really stack on there and 100k is just a little bit reducing
the pressure for those side hustles a little bit more but in the 75k to 100k range I still
think yet yet you really have to throw in a couple of live-in flips or house hacks at the very
least to really have a shot there if there's not serious potential to expand the income by just
sticking with it in the career and continuing to climb the ladder or advance the skill set there.
So those options, I think, are necessary.
That or building the machine of a real estate portfolio, if your area is conducive to that
in that and that income bracket.
That's not going to be practical in Los Angeles, although perhaps $100,000 a year income
earner or two could find some way to make it work within 50 to 100 miles of Los Angeles
with some sort of live-in flip or house hack getting going here,
you're probably going to need that dual income to really have that opportunity
or find something creative.
But in other parts of the country that are lower cost of living,
that is a reasonable way to go about it.
But I think you're going to have to have that side business
where you're truly adding value as a business and not just passively investing
in order to supplement that income and have a real crack at fire within 10 to 15 years.
Okay. I want to hear now from our listeners who are sitting here saying, Scott, I totally did that.
If you made, if you reach financial independence making $45, $75, $700,000 a year household, or similar,
please email Mindy at biggerpockets.com, email Scott at biggerpockets.com. Tell us your story. We want to hear it.
But those of you who were making a higher income, we want to hear your stories too.
email me anyway just to say hi. Email Scott just to say hi. But I do believe that Scott, you are
correct. We're both correct. Yeah, I think there's a lot of right ways to approach life and building
wealth. And again, if you're not trying to fire, go down the traditional retirement stack.
Put the money in the 401k and the Roth. Start investing today and build for the long term,
even if you're starting at $45,000 a year. But if you want to get rich in 10 to 15 years,
You got to play a different set of rules because that ain't going to do it.
It's just not going to happen there unless you get extremely lucky.
And I think I'm not, like, this is a one to two year delay.
I am not saying do not invest in your 401K.
I'm saying for the first next two years, pile up a bunch of cash, read a bunch of books,
and find some opportunities to expand the income, and then contribute to the 401k and Roth.
Once you solved for the income problem and used every resource at your disposal,
including your cash position to seize that next opportunity.
And then go after it.
It's a two-year delay.
And don't do that if you're the type of person who's going to blow your money on a boat
instead of actually investing it in the next opportunity or investment on this.
Don't put it in cash.
Put it somewhere you can't touch it.
But for the fire community, if you're going to go after this, go after it.
And recognize that the investment returns in your first $15,000 are totally immaterial
to the $1.5 million to $2.5 million.
or goal you know you'll actually have in terms of reaching fire within the next 10
to 15 years.
All right, Scott, I thought this was a great conversation.
I would love to hear from our listeners, either through our Facebook group or if you want
to send me or Scott a message, Mindy at BiggerPockets.com, Scott at Biggerpockets.com, or
the Facebook group, Facebook.com slash groups slash BP money.
We would love to hear from you.
How did you reach financial independence?
What business books do you have to recommend?
share with our listeners.
All right.
Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
That wraps up this episode
at the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is the Scott Trench.
I am Indy Jensen saying
Tootles Noodles.
