Can I FIRE at Age 60? Real Numbers, Strategy & Timeline
Achieving FIRE at 60 requires a portfolio of ~$1800K, depending on your target lifestyle. Learn the strategy, savings rate, and tradeoffs.
FIRE at 60: Quick Numbers
Years to accumulate
5 years
5 years
Recommended portfolio at FIRE
$1,800,000
$1,800,000
Lean FIRE number
$500,000
$500,000
Regular FIRE number
$1,000,000
$1,000,000
Fat FIRE number
$2,000,000
$2,000,000
Retiring at 60 — The Reality
Retiring at 60 requires a portfolio of ~$1.8M to sustain a standard 4% withdrawal rate over a 5-year horizon. You have 5 years of accumulation runway if you start now.
Strategy for Retiring at 60
- Sequence-of-returns risk is real: A market crash in the first 5 years of retirement can permanently impair your portfolio. Consider a Bond Tent, lower initial withdrawal rate (3.0-3.5%), or Guyton-Klinger guardrails.
- Healthcare bridge to Medicare: You have 5 years before Medicare eligibility. Budget $15-25K/year for ACA marketplace premiums if retiring before 65.
- Social Security timing: Each year you delay past 60 increases your benefit by 8% (until 70). Delaying can be worth $100K+ in lifetime benefits.
- Withdrawal strategy: With a 5-year horizon, the 4% rule is conservative. Consider 3.5% starting rate for safety, or 3.7% if you have flexibility.
- Roth conversions in low-income years: Early retirement creates a unique window to convert traditional IRA money to Roth at low tax rates — potentially saving $50-200K in lifetime taxes.
Related Tools & Guides
- FIRE Number Calculator — personalized to your situation
- Savings Rate Calculator
- Coast FIRE Calculator — when you can stop saving
- What Is FIRE? The Complete Guide
- How to Start Your FIRE Journey
Data sources: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics (2024), IRS contribution limits (2024), SSA Full Retirement Age schedule, IRS Publication 970 (education savings), and FIRE community benchmarks (r/financialindependence, ChooseFI survey data). Last reviewed: June 2026.