Savings Rate Calculator
The time it takes to reach financial independence — the point where your investments can cover your spending and a paycheck becomes optional — depends overwhelmingly on your savings rate (the share of your take-home pay you save), and almost not at all on how much you earn. The reason is a double effect that makes the relationship dramatically nonlinear: a higher savings rate grows your nest egg faster while simultaneously lowering the nest egg you need, because you've proven you can live on less. Put those together with a safe withdrawal rate (the 4% rule's 25×-spending target) and a real return, and the income term cancels out of the math entirely: someone earning $40,000 and someone earning $400,000 who both save 40% reach independence in the same number of years. The headline figures, at a 5% real return and a 4% withdrawal rate: save 10% and you work roughly 50 years; save 25% and it's about 32; save 50% and it's about 17; save 75% and it's about 7. The curve is steepest at the low end, so the first extra points you save buy back the most time. The durable lessons: track your savings rate as the master dial of your financial timeline; chase it by widening the gap between income and spending from both sides; and don't assume a raise alone shortens the road — it only does if you save the difference instead of spending it.
Free and interactive — no sign-up, nothing to install. Read the full lesson for the plain-language explanation.