Savings & Investing

FIRE Planning for India

How to calculate FIRE targets for India — accounting for inflation, safe withdrawal rates, and India-specific investment options.

Verified against RBI - Consumer Price Index and Inflation on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 4 min read
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Summary

FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) for India requires a larger corpus relative to expenses than in developed markets because of higher inflation (5-7%) and less mature social safety nets. The calculator determines your FIRE number, projects time to reach it, and models withdrawal sustainability using India-specific inflation and return assumptions.

How it works

The FIRE number

FIRE corpus = Annual expenses x Multiplier

The multiplier depends on your safe withdrawal rate (SWR):

  • 4% SWR (25x expenses): standard FIRE, based on US equity returns
  • 3% SWR (33x expenses): conservative, often recommended for India due to higher inflation
  • 2.5% SWR (40x expenses): very conservative, for very early retirees

For India, a 3-3.5% SWR is commonly recommended because:

  • Indian inflation runs higher (5-7% vs 2-3% in the US/UK)
  • Equity market history is shorter and more volatile
  • Healthcare costs can be unpredictable without robust insurance

Inflation adjustment

Future expenses = Current expenses x (1 + inflation)^years

At 6% inflation, Rs 50,000/month expenses become Rs 1,60,000/month in 20 years. Your FIRE corpus must sustain these inflated expenses.

Investment vehicles

VehicleExpected returnTax treatmentLiquidity
Equity MF (index funds)12-14%LTCG 12.5% above Rs 1.25LHigh
Debt MF7-8%Slab rateHigh
PPF7.1%Tax-free (EEE)15-year lock-in
EPF8.15%Tax-free (EEE)On retirement
NPS9-12%Partial tax on withdrawalAge 60

Worked example

Monthly expenses: Rs 60,000, Age: 30, Target FIRE age: 45, Inflation: 6%

  1. Future monthly expenses at 45: Rs 60,000 x 1.06^15 = Rs 1,43,795
  2. Annual expenses at 45: Rs 17,25,540
  3. FIRE corpus (33x at 3% SWR): Rs 5,69,42,820 (approximately Rs 5.7 crore)
  4. Current savings: Rs 15 lakh
  5. Monthly SIP needed at 12% return: approximately Rs 65,000/month

Inputs explained

  • Current monthly expenses — your household spending today
  • Expected inflation — Indian CPI inflation rate (default 6%)
  • Current age and target FIRE age — timeline to financial independence
  • Current savings — existing invested corpus
  • Expected return — blended portfolio return

Outputs explained

  • FIRE corpus — the target amount needed for financial independence
  • Monthly SIP needed — how much to invest each month to reach the target
  • Years to FIRE — how long until you reach your target at current savings rate
  • Post-FIRE cash flow — projected withdrawals and corpus depletion timeline

Assumptions & limitations

  • Uses a constant inflation rate. Indian inflation has ranged from 2% to 12% in recent decades.
  • The 4% rule originates from US data (Trinity study). Indian markets have shorter history, and the safe withdrawal rate may need to be lower.
  • Does not model healthcare cost inflation, which typically runs higher than general CPI in India.
  • EPF and NPS have withdrawal restrictions that may limit accessibility before standard retirement age.
  • Assumes no income post-FIRE. Many FIRE practitioners earn some income through part-time work or passive sources.

Sources

Gov
SEBI - Mutual Fund Regulationsaccessed 28 Feb 2026
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