BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Your Complete Guide to Financial Independence (2025)
Episode Date: July 1, 2025The FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement has transformed how people think about work, money, and retirement. In this comprehensive episode, Mindy and Scott break down everything you ne...ed to know about achieving financial independence and potentially retiring decades earlier than traditional retirement age. We explore the mathematics behind FIRE, different approaches to the movement, and practical strategies for dramatically increasing your savings rate. From understanding the 4% rule to optimizing your investment portfolio, this episode provides a complete roadmap for anyone interested in financial independence. Perfect for both beginners exploring the concept and those already on their FIRE journey looking to optimize their approach. What We Discuss: The 4% Rule Explained How to calculate your FIRE number Proven strategies to save 50%+ of your income Best investment vehicles for FIRE (401k, IRA, taxable accounts) Common FIRE mistakes to avoid Updated strategies for 2025 market conditions Withdrawal strategies And SO much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We have studied early retirement for easily 10,000 hours plus.
This episode is the distillation of the entire early retirement playbook in the simplest, fastest, most actionable way we can come up with.
We hope you refer back to this episode for years to come.
Let us know in the comments below if you have any additional tips, tricks, or suggestions to help others speed their journey to early retirement.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to The Bigger Podcast.
Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen. And with me, as always, is my fundamental master's co-host,
Scott Trench. Thanks, Mindy. Great to be here with you. I never get tired of talking about financial
independence. And I know you never get retired. With that lame joke, let's get into it. We're going to try
to move rapid fire through all of these concepts so that this is, again, a referenceable,
reviewable piece of content that you can come back to for years to come. Let's kick things off by
explaining what financial freedom means, what early retirement means. It means that your assets
times the return that they generate creates a greater stream of spendable liquidity than what your
lifestyle costs. You can solve this equation in a large number of ways. If you've got a million
bucks and you think that you can generate a 10% steady-eddy return, you're retired if you want
to spend $100,000 a year or less. Now, that brings us to the question, what?
what is a reasonable set of assumptions in the context of this equation.
And that brings us to the next concept, which Mindy will introduce.
The 4% rule.
This was created in 1994 by Bill Bangan, who was a traditional financial planner.
And he was trying to answer the question all of his clients had,
what is the safe withdrawal rate to make sure that I have enough money through retirement?
So he did a whole bunch of math based on historic returns and came up with the safe withdrawal rate
of 4%. So you take your portfolio, you withdraw 4%. The next year, you adjust for inflation,
and withdraw 4% again. So on and so forth. He said you have a 96% success rate for having
enough money to last you 30 years in retirement. Early retirees have taken this and kind of
twisted it a little bit to work for their situation. And this is now very commonly cited in
early retirement is, oh, I need to get to my retirement number, which is essentially 25 times
my annual spending. Yep. So this is a way of satisfying the financial freedom equation. If you want to
spend $100,000 per year, you need a $2.5 million portfolio such that you can withdraw $100,000 per year
or 4% of that portfolio. And you can do that indefinitely. And yes, it adjusts for inflation.
It is the answer to how much is enough for early retirement.
Let's introduce the third concept that we think is critical to understanding early retirement,
which is net worth versus a financial portfolio or a fire portfolio, financial independence, retire early portfolio.
There's a common debate about whether you should include your home equity, for example, in your net worth statement.
Yes, you should. Home equity absolutely counts in a net worth statement.
However, you probably shouldn't include your home equity, for example, or your cars or your other
depreciating assets or the assets that you do not intend to sell, home is an appreciating asset,
of course, in most cases, but the assets you do not intend to sell, or which do not generate
cash flows, for example, that you will be comfortable spending in early retirement.
You should exclude those from your financial portfolio or your fire portfolio.
If you want to spend $100,000 per year, you should not include.
the $500,000 or whatever it is of your home equity in your financial portfolio. You will need
$2.5 million in financial assets in order to safely withdraw $4,000 $100,000 per year to live off
of in early retirement. Yep. I do think that it's really important to keep track of your
net worth, including your home equity, but the fire portfolio is only your investable assets
that you'll be able to withdraw from. Okay, Scott, now that we have defined what we're talking about,
we've discussed the 4% rule.
The fourth concept we want to talk about is how long does it take you to get there?
And the answer to this question is remarkably simple in terms of the mathematics thanks to
a wonderful financial blogger called Mr. Money Mustache.
He has an article called the shockingly simple math behind early retirement.
I think this was written 10, 12, 15 years ago at this point.
But the amount of time it will take you to retire early with a stock bond portfolio that
has been researched thoroughly with such research as the work by Bill Bagan on the 4% rule.
The amount of time it will take you to retire early is primarily a function of your savings
rate. Your savings rate as a percentage of your take-home pay. So if, for example, you save
10% of your income and you invest that 10% in a traditional stock bond portfolio earning about 7%
per year, it will take you about 51 years to meet the requirements to retire per the 4%.
percent rule. But if you can increase that to a 20 percent rate, you're going to shave the time to
retire by 14 years. If you can increase it to 30 percent, you're going to drop another nine years.
If you can increase your savings rate to 50 percent, you can retire in 17 years. And of course,
the math gets absurd once you get past a 50 percent savings rate. Your savings rate as a percentage
of your take-home pay is the most important variable for almost everybody, with the exclusion of
some outlier entrepreneurs or superstar investors, which most of us aren't, that will determine
the speed at which you arrive at early financial freedom. I think it's so important to read
this article and check out that chart. There's a couple of charts in this article. It's just
eye-opening and mind-boggling how shockingly simple it is to retire early on a different
timeline, a much accelerated timeline. Okay, Scott, let's discuss the principles that guide the journey.
number five in our list.
For the typical person who's looking to retire early, there are four core themes to this
journey.
Okay.
The first is lowering expenses.
Lowering expenses is so critical to this journey because of what we just showed, right?
The lower your expenses, the faster you accumulate wealth in the first place, liquidity
with which to invest.
And second, the less smaller an asset base you need to sustain early retirement, right?
If you can drop your spending from $100,000 per year to $8,000.
$80,000 per year, for example, by having paid off cars or paying off the mortgage or whatever
that looks like for you, you can reduce the asset base by 25 times that amount. Reducing the
spending from $100,000 per year to $80,000 per year increases your savings rate by $20,000,
and it reduces the portfolio that you need in retirement from $2.5 million to $2 million.
That's a huge difference. Massive, massive contribution. The second principle here is,
obviously more income always helps. This is an obvious statement. We don't need to harp into it too much.
We'll talk about it very briefly here. There's a ton of content out there. But yes, more income always
helps speed up that journey as long as your spending remains constant. The third principle is that
you need to either accept average returns by passively investing in stock market broad-based index
funds, which is the most popular method for investing in the early retirement community. Or you need to be
prepared to actively invest if you want to chase higher returns in strategies like real estate
or business. The last principle here is tax efficiency. For passive or index fund investors,
their investment strategy, the work here, the knowledge that you need to develop is how
to minimize your tax burden by taking advantage of tax advantaged accounts like the 401K,
like the Roth IRA, like an HSA, like 529 plans,
and using these advantages that you have to put high tax income into tax deferred accounts
and then convert that into a Roth account or access it early in early retirement.
That's the strategy and complexity of most people's bread and butter approach to retiring early.
Okay, Scott, surely there's some cheat codes that we can use to get us there a little bit faster.
So going through those guiding principles, we're going to talk about each one, right?
Lowering expenses, increasing income, investing,
and then tax efficiency.
Mindy, can you give us a preview of number six here, the point number six,
about the expense cheat codes that can dramatically accelerate financial independence?
Number one is knowing where your money is going and tracking your expenses.
This is by far the most beneficial first step in your journey to financial independence
because I find that most people are not hyper-focused on where their money's going.
And this doesn't mean that you're not spending money on things you're.
enjoy, this means you are intentionally spending money, not mindlessly spending money.
And I think that anybody listening right now has a space in their budget to remove mindless
spending so that they can either start paying down debt, start investing, start doing something
more intentional with their money.
Scott, you wrote in your book, Set for Life, the top three expenses that most Americans have
are housing, transportation, and food.
So let's knock those out or knock those.
down. Housing, I've been able to knock out my housing costs by doing what's called a live-in flip. I move
into an ugly house. I make it beautiful over the course of two years. And I pay no taxes when I sell it for a
much higher price than when I bought it. That's called live-in-flipping. There's a bunch of rules around it.
But another option, if you're not handy, if you don't want to live in a construction zone,
because that's essentially what you're signing up for, is something called house hacking,
where you are renting out extra portions of your house so that you can generate some income and help offset the cost of your housing.
Get creative.
All right.
We're going to take a quick break.
We're going to retire for just a minute here.
And we'll be back after this.
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Welcome back to the show.
Next up is going to be transportation.
Transportation is usually, not always, but usually the second biggest line item in most
Americans' budget. The answer to how to keep your transportation costs low is to drive an unsexy
paid off economy vehicle, or better yet, bike or walk as a primary mode of transportation if you're
hardcore. The other portion of transportation expenses usually applies to traveling, like airfare
and those other items, check out travel rewards. There's a knot of opportunities and a lot of
research out there about how to use regular household spending to defray or offset most or all
of those types of travel expenses. Yes, it's unsexy. Yes, it's work. This is really important, though,
if you want to crank that savings rate into that 10, 20, 50, or even higher percent rate.
The last component is food.
Food is a constant always on discipline where your choice of housing and your choice of what
vehicle you drive are one-time decisions that can shorten your timeline to financial independence
by decades each, just those single decisions.
Your food decision is a constant always on decision that you've got to control month to month,
just like your budget.
And that comes down to making most of your meals most of the time at home with reasonable
food from reasonable grocery stores. Scott, the path of financial independence is not a lazy path.
You don't end up there. You go there on purpose and to do something on purpose takes work.
That's the bottom line. Now let's talk about income. Number seven, your income is important.
Duh. And the more income you have, the easier and faster you will get to financial independence.
So a good income review is to review market compensation and ask for a raise or go and get a new job.
Better is to get a job with major upside. Equity in the company, commissions, there is no limit to the
commissions you can earn in a lot of jobs. Profit sharing is also awesome. Best, start or buy a business and
control everything yourself. Absolutely. There's a ton of discussion out there about how to make money.
We assume that if you're listening to this, most people feel that they're optimized for base salary at their
current job. If you want to explode your income, you got to control your expenses.
so you can take a little bit more risk, whatever that means, to have a little bit more upside.
And as you move toward financial independence, those opportunities will explode if you look for them, even if they do not appear obvious right now.
All right, let's move on to the eighth concept here, which is the most common approaches for investment from aspiring early retirees.
The four most common approaches that we see are first passively managed index funds.
A lot of investors for very good reason invests, invests,
primarily in things like broad-based market-cap-weighted, low-feet index funds, such as those offered
by Vanguard or Fidelity. That's the most common approach. A lot of research out there. If you're
interested in really diving into the philosophy, check out the simple path to wealth by our friend
J.L. Collins. Great book on that subject. The next most common approach is going to be real estate.
We know there are 17 million people, many of whom are on bigger pockets, who invest in rental
properties. And that's a great way to build passive income over time. That's a just
for inflation and can accelerate your wealth-building journey through the use of leverage.
It is not totally passive. You will spend a lot of time learning how to invest in real estate
and potentially actively managing your property in pursuit of those higher or at least
different returns than what you can get in broad-based index funds. The third most common
option is some kind of business ownership. The spectrum from side hustle to large business
is a large spectrum, but we see people from all over the place coming on the Bigger Pockets
Money podcast and talking about how that business turbocharged their wealth. If you want to become
very wealthy or approach fatfire, this is the best approach that you will find out there. And there's
plenty of resources out there about entrepreneurship. And the last investment approach that I want to
call out is this long tale of alternatives or oddball investments. A surprisingly large percentage of the
people who come on bigger pockets money and share journeys or stories of early retirement success
have some kind of oddball investment or asset that they've accumulated. One example of those, that's not
very oddball, is a pension. A lot of teachers have pensions that kick in around the age of 50. The same thing
is true for military folks. But we hear also stories about folks who have started side hustles. We have
folks who have inheritances that come in. We have folks that have some kind of weird side business,
like, for example, someone who trained horses and would actually buy a horse, train it up for
equestrian or riding shows and then sell that horse for a meaningful profit. Obviously, that's
an extreme outlier example, but you'd be surprised at how many people have a story like that that seems
weird or unusual or specific to their circumstance that they have found a way to monetize and make
into a major part of their financial journey. One last example I'll give on the subject before we
move on is a gentleman who had a Christmas light installation business. Seasonal business made almost
six figures a year just in a few months, putting them up, pulling them down. Now that we've talked about
that you need to invest. Let's talk about the investment order of operations. Number nine.
Just to preview this, this investment order of operations assumes that the individual is a high
income earner and is investing in the passively managed stock bond portfolio that is most common
among people approaching fire. If you are considering investing in real estate or prioritizing
business or a side hustle investment, that may trump some of the items.
in this order of operations.
Yes, very important to note.
This is for stock market investments.
Number one, I want you to have an emergency fund.
And similar to the Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps method,
I want you to initially have a $1,000 emergency fund.
If you already have this, great.
Let's move on.
Next step is your bad debt.
This is your interest rates of 8 or 10% or higher,
your credit card, your student loads, your car interest,
anything that is more than 8 to 10 percent, you want to knock that out. Absolutely. It's a guaranteed
return if you're to have interest at that level. And that trumps most types of stock market
investments, in my opinion. Up next is your 401k to the match that your employer offers. This can
actually be done in tandem or flip-flopped with the bad debt depending on your personal preference.
But you want to be contributing to your 401k to get the full match if your employer offers.
first one. Next up, we've got the employee stock purchase plan. At my old employer, we used to have an
option where we could buy the stock at a 15% discount and flip it basically immediately the next
quarter for a 15% gain. There is no emergency fund, no other investment that can possibly match
the odds of an investment like that, a participation in that employee stock purchase plan,
even if I didn't intend to hold the stock, which I didn't. It absolutely comes before even
building up the next step here, which is to fully fund the emergency fund. Yep, your fully funded
emergency fund is $10,000 or three to six months of spending. And I think this is a really personal
one, but how easy is it for you to get another job should you be fired from your job immediately?
And how comfortable are you with reducing your expenses so that you can make your emergency fund
last longer? So this is again, just a ballpark, but $10,000 or three to six months is.
spending. Next up is your HSA. If you have a high deductible health care plan, you can participate in
the HSA, which is triple tax leverage. You pay no tax going in. It grows tax free and you pay no
tax coming out for qualified medical purchases. Again, you have to have a high deductible health care
plan in order to take advantage of the HSA. But I think this is absolutely one worth looking into.
If you're generally healthy and you're approaching fire, HSA tops the list of tax advantaged accounts
that I'd be going into.
Next up is the rest of the 401K,
finishing out the contributions to the 401K.
Remember, this order of operations is for a person
who has a high income
and is using a passive index fund-style investment approach
who intends to retire early.
Contributing to a tax-deferred account
in this situation like the 401K
is critical because we can defer tax
on high-income in our high-income earning years
and we can harvest that income
in lower tax retirement years.
That's a critical assumption here, and that's why the 401K is before the next item on our list,
which is the Roth IRA.
Roth IRA, or if you don't qualify due to a higher income, the backdoor or mega backdoor
Roth IRA.
You are paying taxes now, and then your money grows tax-free.
I love the Roth for all ages, but I super love it the earlier you are in your actual career.
So the younger you are, the more money you should focus on getting into your Roth, just because it grows tax-free for so long.
Up next, Scott, is the 529 plan.
If you have children, you have children you would like to fund their college accounts for.
This is in many states tax deductible.
Your contributions going into the 529 plan, but not all states.
So definitely look that up.
But it just allows your money to grow so that you have a larger amount to contribute to someone's higher education.
education costs. It allows the gains to grow tax-free as long as they are then used for qualified
educational expenses, like college tuition, for example. So really important if you plan to fund
college. We discussed this at length. It's important also not to overfund these. You can contribute,
I think, up to $29,000 per year here in 2025. That can add up to a much larger amount than what is
needed for college if you are an aggressive go-getter and get started very early. So you want to be
careful to fund about the amount you need for college with a comfortable margin of safety because
excess funds in there may be a little bit harder or just to have a little bit more of a penalty
to access for other early retirement options. So once you have hit the goals that you need for
saving for college, next up comes our taxable investments, the after-tax brokerage that we've got
going and everything else kind of gets dumped in there and put into those, set it and forget
an index funds. Scott, last up is the optional low-interest debt or the mortgages. I am
personally not choosing to pay off my mortgages, and that's the only debt that I have, but I
am instead choosing to put everything remaining into my taxable investments. You have chosen a different
route. I chose not to take a mortgage when I bought my house. I bought my house after interest rates
rose here in 2024. I chose not to get a mortgage on that purchase, which is similar in style
to choosing to pay off the mortgage, of course. And I am not choosing to pay off some of the really
low interest rate mortgages on my rental properties. So I'm in a hybrid place on this particular
decision personally. I carry no personal debt, however. Yeah. And,
And again, Scott, you just use a word choice.
I choose not to pay this off.
This is absolutely a choice.
And I just encourage you to make thoughtful decisions as opposed to, well, I heard
somebody say it once.
So that's what I'm going to do.
Absolutely.
All right.
Before we invest in the final steps of our journey to early retirement, we're going to take
a quick break.
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 taxed 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 payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one
place. So every decision actually moves in a 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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the point in everybody's five journey that is not so fun number 10 on our list is the grind
Yeah, so I'll preview this. There's a question that we get from a lot of folks who come in and they say,
what am I doing wrong? I earn a high income at a good job. I am maxing out my HSA. I'm maxing out my 401k.
I'm getting a little money set aside for taxable investments. I'm three years into this.
What's going on? It feels like things are far away. Well, yeah, that feeling, this bored feeling, this,
everything is going fine. I seem to have this whole stack down. Takes about a year, maybe two, maybe three,
for a lot of folks, even the most hardcore go-getters, to fully figure out and turn on to
an autopilot-style investment portfolio. And then that's the grind. It takes 10 years. It's
boring. It doesn't feel like things are changing during a large period of that. But that feeling,
that vague discomfort with, am I doing everything right on there? The balance seems to be going
up, but it seems far away. That's the feeling of becoming rich. And that's the period of time
that needs to pass, usually seven, 10 years at minimum. Most people, it'll be probably between
seven and 15 years if you go fairly hardcore on the fire journey in order to have a realistic
shot at retiring early. So this just needs to continue for a decade, usually at minimum,
before you'll really kind of find yourself getting close to that finish line.
Yeah, and you should be really thoughtful in your grind. How do you make the grind more
palatable? You enjoy it. So you don't pull all the joy out of your life and just slog through
life for 10 years. What are things that really bring you joy? What are things that you value?
If you value travel, continue to travel.
Just don't take extravagant $1,000 a day cruises.
Don't take extravagant vacations that are $20, $30,000,
unless you can really truly afford it,
unless that's really something that makes your life better.
But be thoughtful in your spending.
Just make sure to include enjoyable things
so that that grind isn't just such a slog.
All right, Scott, we have reached financial independence.
we are early retired.
How are we accessing that money?
Yeah, so this is the mechanics of accessing the money
that most people who are pursuing financial independence
have put into retirement accounts.
And it's important to remind folks,
why is all this money in retirement accounts?
It's tax efficiency, right?
During the period in which one is grinding to early retirement
or the grind period,
it is likely that you will be in a high-income tax bracket.
And it's important to play
the tax efficiency game, right? We talked about housing, transportation, and food is the big three
expenses. There's another huge expense, which is tax. If you follow the order of operations that we
outlined previously, you will pursue, in most cases, a highly tax-advantaged strategy for saving
towards retirement. But your money will all be, or a huge percentage of your wealth, will be
in tax-advanted retirement accounts. Those accounts typically carry a penalty for early withdrawal. That
penalty is not very large, but it's about 10%. We want to avoid that penalty, and we can access
that money in those accounts through advanced strategies to withdraw that money early or convert that
money into a Roth IRA. So I'll walk through those very briefly. The first approach is if most
of your money is in a 401k and you want to withdraw it early, you can do what's called a substantially
equal periodic payment or a 72T with distribution. We talked about this for an hour in episode 649 of the
Bigger Pockets Money podcast. Go check that out. You need.
to understand this in depth if you want to employ these strategies. But basically, if you have a
million bucks, you can set a distribution approach according to one of three rules and begin
withdrawing chunks of that. You will pay taxes on any distributions, early distributions from a 401k,
but it is a way to access that money penalty-free before age 59 and a half. The second common
advanced strategy for early retirees is what we call the Roth conversion ladder. This is where
if we have money in a 401k, a tax deferred retirement account, we're able to convert that in a
given year. We pay income on the conversion. Let's say that we have $100,000 that we're converting.
We have to pay income tax on that $100,000 conversion, but we can put it into our Roth IRA
where it can season for five years while it grows and while it remains invested, and we can
withdraw that $100,000 conversion tax and penalty free after that five-year seasoning period is up.
This is very powerful because if I'm in a high income tax bracket in my earning years and I'm in a low income tax bracket when I retire, I can seriously save on taxes, maybe as much as 30, 35 percent, depending on how much I'm earning during that grind period.
And the last one, Scott, accessing those aftertax brokerage funds that you have been investing in throughout your career.
Those ones you can access any time.
You'll just pay taxes on the gains whenever you sell that part of your portfolio.
You will pay taxes on some of the gains.
Scott, this is fun. The long-term capital gains tax rates for the year 2025 is 0% if you are
married filing jointly up to $96,700. It's 0% if you're single, up to $48,350. You're paying
15% on 96,701 all the way up to $600,000. And that's just taxing the gain. When you sell a stock in your
after tax brokerage account, there's the money that you paid for it and the gain on top of that.
So your tax bracket could be incredibly low or zero while still accessing up to $96,700 if you're married.
Yeah. For all the work we do into using these very complex rules to put our money away in tax-advantaged accounts,
taxes are really not a meaningful barrier to retiring early under today's tax code.
That's a very important consideration, Scott.
tax code. All right, Scott, we are retired. We have started accessing our money. There's still some
things we need to consider. These are kind of more of the miscellaneous considerations, if you will,
for early retirees that involve the mechanics of actually retiring early. So first, I want to call
out that the vast majority of early retirees that we talk to here on Bigger Pockets Money seem to have
a one to two year cash cushion. There's not a lot of research that says you have to have a one to two
year cash cushion, but we find that mentally that seems to be a requirement among the vast
majority of people who actually pull the trigger and retire early. Mindy is one exception, but Mindy
is also going to get jailed by the early retirement police because she is an active real estate
agent and brings in other sources of income there. I have this one to two year cash because it
positioned personally. Yes. If you don't have other sources of income, other sources of cash
you can access one to two years is a great number. Scott, you're going to need health care in
your retirement. And health care is currently tied to jobs. So the only other way to get health care
is through the exchange. We've talked about a couple of other ways that are very unpopular and very rare
among the fire community in practice, right? So the most common way, of course, is to get health insurance
on the exchange. For a family of four, for us, that would be $1,800 a month while I have two
dependent children. That's a major expense. This is America. You've got to plan on it,
put it into your fire number. There are other options that are lightly considered by folks.
One, for example, is these health share ministries. We've talked about those at various times.
they often come with a set of rules that make folks a little uncomfortable and again are fairly rare,
but they do exist and they are an option that is available to folks.
And the other option is to get some kind of part-time work or accept a job that's pretty easy with benefits,
which is another fairly popular tactic among those who are retired early.
One last option that's worth calling out in health care actually is the nomadic lifestyle.
If you travel around the world for a year, for example, there are actually options that are far
cheaper than the exchange for health insurance, paradoxically.
Yes, but you do have to be outside of the United States.
for more than half of the year. So six months, end a day or more. Scott, we've also got
regular insurance, life insurance, long-term insurance, disability insurance. That's something to
consider. Do you think you're going to need it? Do you feel comfortable being self-insured?
There's not really a big gotcha here. It's just a reminder. These are not major expenses for
most people who are generally healthy. It can be a major blocker for folks that have some sort of
long-term issue. For example, if you're generally healthy, you just need to remember, hey, if you had
life insurance or long-term disability or short-term disability through your employer leading up to your
departure, when you retire early, you'll be responsible for those on your own. And even if you're one of the
folks like me who thinks that financial independence obviates the need for, for example, life insurance,
you may still want long-term disability, because if you are costing several hundred thousand dollars a year
or tens of thousands of dollars a year for long-term care, that can be a burden that you may not have
planned for in early retirement. So you want to make sure that you've checked the box on those types of
by perhaps talking to a fee-only financial planner.
Scott, another thing to consider is your spending actually might go down considerably
during early retirement.
I know that our spending has gone up in some categories as we develop the skill of spending,
but our expenses have gone down significantly in other categories.
Carl is not buying work clothes.
He's not traveling to the office.
You know, when we go traveling, we do travel during the weekdays because weekdays travel
is less expensive. We DIY all of our home expenses and home projects because we have the time to do it now.
There's a lot less going out in early retirement among a lot of my friends.
There's a meme out there with kind of three levels involved. The first is cutting your own grass.
The second is hiring somebody else to cut your grass. And the third is cutting your grass.
That framework hopefully is helpful to folks thinking about how those expenses can actually go down in early retirement to some degree.
And so you want to be aware of that.
The other side to that coin of spending potentially going down is if you're retiring using something like the 4% rule,
understand that in the vast majority of cases, adjusting for inflation, your principal bounds, your wealth will increase greatly over the ensuing 30 year period to the point where you may find yourself with way more money after you've retired than you ever thought you would have and you will be able to likely flex up spending.
You shouldn't count on that, but you should be aware of that phenomenon because that is the likely scenario that will.
will happen after your retirement. And of course, you can increase those odds greatly if you bring in
any type of part-time income, start any kind of side hustle, factor in things like social security,
inheritance, whatever those are in your life. That is going to be likely. And the 4% rule in
early retirement is an extremely conservative take on personal finance. Scott, the last thing I want
people listening to this to consider is having something to retire to. There are so many people
who are on this path to financial independence, I can't wait to quit my job. And then what happens
next? Having something to retire to makes the journey more exciting. Oh, I can't wait till I get to do this.
I can't wait till I can do that. And you don't have to wait until you're retired to start doing that.
That's just you'll be able to have more time to do it when you're retired. Start learning the skill,
enjoying the journey, adding things to your grind so that it isn't a slog. And then have something to
retire too. Absolutely. Yeah. I want to call out here that a lot of people search for early retirement,
especially really early retirement, you know, in 30s or 40s even, because they really dislike
their current job or current set of circumstances. And I love that. I love that that's a
motivating factor. That's awesome, right? Go take control of your financial situation and use that
intense dislike of your current situation to fuel your financial journey. But it shouldn't take you 10 years
and the accumulation of millions of dollars for your situation to improve.
Somewhere along the way, as you amass wealth, you should have the option to get a better job
or higher pay or start that business well in advance of early retirement or otherwise be thinking
about what you want to be doing in early retirement and spending more and more time doing that
along the journey.
This is a sliding scale, not a hard cutoff if you're doing it right.
All right, Scott, I think this was a great rapid fire discussion on the fundamentals of the journey
to financial independence. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise. I had a great time with
our chat. Yeah, me too, Mindy. If anybody watching this enjoyed this video, please save it.
Please watch it again in the future. Please subscribe to our YouTube channel. Please give us a follow
on our podcast, on Apple Podcast or Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcast. And please come on
BiggerPocketsmoney.com and check it out. This is all we do all day long is try to figure out how
to help people accelerate their journey to early financial freedom or make it a little bit more
enjoyable. All right, Scott, that wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Trench. I am Minnie Jensen saying take a bow, Highland Cow.
