Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

How 'FIRE' is Fueling the Dream of Never Working Again

Aprameya VN Darpan, 21 May, 2026 05:21 PM
  • How 'FIRE' is Fueling the Dream of Never Working Again

Krishnan Srinivasan was 35 when he walked into his manager's cabin and resigned. He didn’t resign because he had another job lined up or because he was burned out. He resigned simply because he no longer needed to work. 
 
For the last nine years, the Bengaluru-based software engineer had lived on 40 per cent of his salary, invested the rest with surgical discipline, and built a corpus large enough to fund the rest of his life. He was, by any conventional measure, young enough to be mid-career. He chose to be done. Krishnan is not a lottery winner or an heir. He is a practitioner of FIRE—and he is far from alone. 

What is FIRE, and Where Did It Come From? 

FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. At its core, it is a personal finance philosophy built around one radical idea: that retirement is not an age but a number.  

The modern FIRE movement traces its intellectual roots to the book, “Your Money or Your Life” by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez, which argued that you are trading your “life energy” for money. In simple terms, the time you worked to earn money. The book, however, asked whether the trade was worth it.  

The concept gained mainstream velocity in 1998 when financial researcher William Bengen established the "4% rule": A retiree can withdraw 4 per cent of their invested corpus annually with a high probability that the money will outlast them over a 30-year horizon. 

From these two ideas emerged a formula that FIRE adherents now treat almost as gospel.  

To calculate your FIRE number, you estimate your annual expenses, then multiply by 25. If you spend CAD 50,000 a year, your FIRE number is CAD 1,250,000. That is the corpus you must accumulate, by investing in equities or mutual funds, before you can stop working and live off returns.  

The aggressive among them target a savings rate of 50 to 70 per cent of income. The extreme fringe pushes it to 80 per cent. Within the movement, variations have emerged to match different ambitions.  

LeanFIRE targets a minimalist lifestyle with a smaller corpus.  

FatFIRE targets early retirement without giving up comfort.  

BaristaFIRE involves reaching partial financial independence and supplementing with light, low-stress work, the financial equivalent of coasting. 

Why are Millennials Increasingly Obsessed with FIRE 

No generation has taken to FIRE quite like Millennials, and the reasons are not hard to find. This is a cohort that entered the workforce during or just after the 2008 financial crisis. Millennials—born between 1981 and 1996—watched their parents lose jobs, savings, or both, and internalized a deep skepticism of the employee-employer relationship.  

The pandemic sharpened that skepticism further. Mass layoffs, the sudden proof that remote work was always possible, and the jarring experience of watching life shrink to a screen all prompted a reckoning with the question FIRE has always asked: Is this how I want to spend my finite time? 

Social media has turbocharged the movement's spread. Reddit forums like r/financialindependence have millions of members sharing savings milestones, portfolio strategies, and resignation letters.  

Back home in Canada, FIRE has its own twist amid the rising cost-of-living crisis. Here, Index fund investing is the dominant vehicle to achieve the FIRE figure because no single company’s collapse can wipe out the portfolio.  

Interestingly, Canada's universal healthcare system gives FIRE aspirants a structural leg up over their American counterparts. Since coverage is not tied to employment, Canadians who retire early don't face the potentially crippling insurance costs that Americans must budget for a FIRE lifestyle.  

There is also generational math at play. Millennials who entered high-paying tech or finance roles in their twenties discovered, sometimes by accident, that high income combined with controlled lifestyle inflation could compound into independence faster than anyone told them was possible. 

The Pitfalls Nobody Posts About 

For all its appeal, FIRE has serious fault lines. The 4 per cent rule was derived from US market data over a specific historical period. Hence, its applicability to Indian or Canadian markets, with their own inflation dynamics and market volatility, has remained a matter of active debate. Moreover, assuming a 6 to 7 per cent real return on equity over decades involves optimism that markets may not always honor. 

There is also the underestimated threat of lifestyle inflation post-retirement. For example: children's education, medical emergencies, and/or aging parents. Healthcare costs alone can devastate a corpus that looks comfortable on a spreadsheet. 

Then there is the psychological dimension that FIRE literature often glosses over. Identity, structure, social belonging: For many people, work provides all three. Early retirees frequently report unexpected aimlessness, a condition some researchers have started calling ‘purpose poverty’. A surprising number return to work, not for money, but for meaning. 

The Bottom Line 

FIRE is not a universal blueprint. It is a framework for asking harder questions about time, money, and what you are trading one for the other. Its most valuable contribution is not the retirement math but the insistence that financial decisions be made consciously rather than by default. Whether you retire at 40 or 65, the discipline to live below your means and invest the difference is counsel that ages well. The dream of never working again may be the headline, but financial intentionality is the actual story. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now
The trade war between the U.S. and Canada took another turn Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to double the tariff on steel and aluminum imports coming from Canada in response to Ontario's surcharge on electricity exports. Trump said 50 per cent tariffs will be placed on Canadian steel and aluminum starting Wednesday, up from the 25 per cent tariffs that had been expected to apply to those materials.

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs
Prime minister-designate Mark Carney says he will keep Canadian retaliatory tariffs in place until "Americans show us respect" and commit to free trade again. Carney is reacting after U.S. President Donald Trump moved today to double incoming tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, which Carney calls an attack on Canadian workers and businesses.

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters
Doctors who were thrust into national fame when COVID-19 hit five years ago say they try to focus on positive feedback from the public rather than the angry backlash and threats of violence they faced. British Columbia public health chief Dr. Bonnie Henry still has a security detail to this day because of threats against her and her family from people angry about lockdowns or opposed to COVID vaccination. 

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax
Mark Carney's victory in the Liberal leadership race puts the final nail in the coffin of Ottawa's controversial plan to hike the inclusion rate on capital gains. When they tabled their budget last spring, the federal Liberals presented the plan to change capital gains as a way to get wealthy Canadians and corporations to pay more — but the plan has faced a series of delays ever since.

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office
During his final days in office, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pushing for long-promised reform to the RCMP.  A government report released Monday, which highlights concerns about Canada's capacity to meet "the new threat environment," says it's time to modernize the police service to focus on "the most serious forms of criminality."

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'
Only two of the candidates in the Liberal leadership race — Mark Carney and Ruby Dhalla — disclosed their fundraising events to Elections Canada. A political transparency advocate says this exposes a "loophole" in the rules for funding political campaigns that needs to be closed — since some of the contenders held fundraisers without publicly disclosing them or reporting who attended.

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'