Your savings rate is the single most powerful variable in your FIRE timeline — more than income, more than investment returns. Calculate your required savings rate and see exactly what it means for your retirement date.
The most counterintuitive insight in the FIRE movement: your savings rate determines your retirement date far more than your income level or investment returns. A person earning $60,000 and saving 50% reaches FIRE in approximately the same timeframe as a person earning $120,000 and saving 25% — because both are saving $30,000/year and living on $30,000/year (which defines their FIRE number).
This is mathematically elegant and practically liberating: FIRE is not primarily an income problem, it's a lifestyle design problem. You don't need to earn more — you need to spend less relative to income. And in Canada, with lower healthcare costs, affordable public transit in many cities, and strong public services, a high savings rate is genuinely achievable across a wide income range.
| Savings Rate | Years to FIRE (from zero) | FIRE Age (starting at 25) | What This Looks Like |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | ~43 years | 68 | Traditional retirement |
| 20% | ~37 years | 62 | Slightly early retirement |
| 30% | ~28 years | 53 | Early retirement territory |
| 40% | ~22 years | 47 | True early retirement |
| 50% | ~17 years | 42 | Aggressive FIRE |
| 60% | ~12.5 years | 37-38 | Very aggressive FIRE |
| 70% | ~8.5 years | 33-34 | Extreme FIRE |
| 80% | ~5.5 years | 30-31 | Only with very high income |
Assumes 6% real returns, starting from zero, 4% withdrawal rate. CPP/OAS at 65 reduces the FIRE number and shortens timelines further.
Housing is the biggest lever: Housing typically consumes 30-40% of after-tax income for Canadians in expensive cities. Downsizing, moving to a cheaper city, taking in a roommate, or buying a duplex and renting the other unit can shave 10-20% off your housing cost ratio — the single biggest savings rate improvement available.
Cars are the second biggest lever: The true cost of car ownership in Canada — insurance, gas, maintenance, depreciation, parking — ranges from $7,000-$15,000/year. Going car-free or car-light (one car per couple, used car owned outright) can free up $5,000-$100/year immediately.
Every raise goes to savings: The most effective savings rate strategy is lifestyle stability combined with income growth. When you get a raise, keep your spending flat and direct 100% of the increase to savings. Going from a 30% savings rate to 50% is far easier when income grows than when expenses shrink.
Automate it: Set up automatic contributions to TFSA and RRSP on payday, before spending is possible. Canadians who automate savings consistently outperform those who save "what's left." Set the savings transfer to occur the same day as your paycheck deposit.
Every working Canadian should treat the annual TFSA contribution limit ($7,000 in 2026) as the minimum savings floor. At $7,000/year invested in XEQT from age 25, a Canadian accumulates approximately $1.38M in completely tax-free assets by age 65 (at 7% return) — entirely from the minimum TFSA contribution. The maximum TFSA becomes a powerful tool when combined with RRSP contributions and non-registered investing for higher-income earners.
For FIRE-focused Canadians, the goal is to max both TFSA ($7,000/year) and RRSP (18% of prior year earned income, max $31,560 in 2026) each year during the highest-income working years. Combined, this represents $38,560+/year of tax-advantaged investment — a savings rate that, for most Canadian households, represents 25-50% of after-tax income.
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