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FIRE Planning for New Zealand

How to calculate your FIRE number for NZ, accounting for KiwiSaver, NZ Super, PIE tax treatment, and local inflation.

Verified against Stats NZ - Consumers Price Index on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 3 min read
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Summary

FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) for New Zealand requires building a portfolio large enough that investment returns cover living expenses indefinitely. NZ-specific factors include KiwiSaver as a forced savings vehicle (locked until age 65), NZ Superannuation as a universal pension from age 65, and PIE fund tax efficiency. NZ inflation averages around 3.1%, which is moderate by global standards.

How it works

The FIRE number

FIRE corpus = Annual expenses / Safe Withdrawal Rate (SWR)

At the standard 4% SWR: FIRE number = Annual expenses x 25. NZ researchers and financial advisors often suggest 3.5-4% given NZ’s smaller equity market and higher exposure to global funds.

NZ Super as a safety net

NZ Superannuation is a universal, non-means-tested pension payable from age 65:

StatusGross fortnightly (2025)Approximate annual
Single, living aloneNZ$1,096NZ$28,496
Couple (combined)NZ$1,688NZ$43,888

NZ Super reduces your effective FIRE number because it covers a portion of expenses from age 65 onward. For early retirees, you need the full FIRE corpus to bridge the gap until 65, then NZ Super partially replaces withdrawals.

KiwiSaver timing

KiwiSaver funds are locked until age 65 (with limited early withdrawal for first-home purchase or significant financial hardship). This creates a two-phase FIRE plan:

  1. Pre-65: live off taxable investments and savings
  2. Post-65: KiwiSaver unlocks + NZ Super kicks in, reducing withdrawal pressure

Investment returns

NZ KiwiSaver growth funds have delivered 7-9% annualised returns over the past decade (before PIE tax, after fund fees). A conservative real-return assumption of 5% (after inflation at 3.1%) is reasonable for long-term FIRE planning.

Worked example

Annual expenses: NZ$60,000, Age: 30, Current savings: NZ$80,000 (NZ$40,000 in KiwiSaver + NZ$40,000 taxable), Annual savings: NZ$25,000, Return: 7%

  1. FIRE number (4% SWR): NZ$60,000 / 0.04 = NZ$1,500,000
  2. Savings rate: NZ$25,000 / NZ$85,000 income = 29%
  3. Year-by-year simulation: start NZ$80,000, add NZ$25,000/year at 7%
  4. Portfolio crosses NZ$1,500,000 at approximately year 21 (age 51)
  5. NZ Super at 65 (single): approximately NZ$28,496/year, reducing required withdrawals by 47%
  6. Post-65 effective SWR: (NZ$60,000 - NZ$28,496) / NZ$1,500,000 = 2.1% — very sustainable

Key differences from other markets

  • NZ Superannuation is universal and non-means-tested — unlike the UK State Pension (which requires 35 qualifying years of NI contributions) or Australia’s Age Pension (which is means-tested). This makes NZ Super a reliable floor for post-65 planning.
  • KiwiSaver is locked until 65 with no early access for retirement purposes — unlike Australian super (accessible from preservation age 60) or US 401(k) plans (accessible with penalties from 59.5). FIRE planners must build a separate taxable portfolio to cover pre-65 expenses.

स्रोत

fire financial-independence nz new-zealand kiwisaver nz-super retirement