FIRE Planning in India — The Complete Guide
The 4% rule, India-specific adjustments, city-wise corpus, savings rate math, and what most FIRE guides get wrong.
What is FIRE, and Is It Realistic in India?
FIRE means building a corpus large enough that your investment returns cover your living expenses indefinitely. You stop depending on a salary. Your money works, you don't have to.
The Indian FIRE movement is real but different from what you read in US blogs. India has higher inflation (5–7%), different tax structures (LTCG at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh, STCG at 20%), no equivalent of US Social Security, and very different cost-of-living realities across cities. A FIRE corpus that works in Mysuru may not work in Mumbai.
The FIRE Formula — How Your Corpus is Calculated
/* FIRE Number — basic */
FIRE Corpus = Annual Expenses ÷ Safe Withdrawal Rate (SWR)
/* Example at 3.5% SWR */
Monthly spend: ₹75,000 → Annual: ₹9 Lakh
FIRE Corpus = ₹9,00,000 ÷ 0.035 = ₹2.57 Crore
/* Inflation-adjusted (if retiring in 15 years, 6% inflation) */
Future monthly spend: ₹75,000 × (1.06)^15 ≈ ₹1,80,000/month
Inflation-adj. FIRE Corpus = ₹21.6L ÷ 0.035 = ≈ ₹6.17 Crore
This is why FIRE planning without inflation is dangerous. You might feel ₹2.5 crore is enough today — but if you're planning to retire in 15 years, the actual corpus you need is closer to ₹6 crore due to inflation-adjusted future expenses.
The 4% Rule — Does it Work in India?
The 4% rule comes from the Trinity Study (1998), which tested US equity/bond portfolios over 30-year periods. It found that withdrawing 4% annually had a 95%+ success rate of lasting 30 years.
India is different. Here's why a conservative 3–3.5% withdrawal rate is often recommended:
| Factor | USA (Trinity Study) | India (Reality) |
|---|---|---|
| Average inflation | 2–3% | 5–7% (CPI range) |
| Capital gains tax on equity | Long-term: 15–20% | LTCG 12.5% above ₹1.25L; STCG 20% |
| Safe withdrawal rate | 4% (30-yr horizon) | 3–3.5% recommended |
| Sequence of returns risk | Studied over 30 yrs | More data needed; markets younger |
| Social safety net | Social Security income | None (EPF only if employed) |
| Healthcare cost inflation | ~3–4% | ~8–12% in private hospitals |
Lean FIRE, Regular FIRE, and Fat FIRE — India Edition
₹25,000–40,000/month
Corpus needed: ₹1–1.5 Crore
📍 Tier-2/3 cities (Mysuru, Indore, Coimbatore)
Simple, frugal. No luxury travel, private schools, or extravagant dining. Sustainable but requires low fixed costs.
⚠ Risk: High lifestyle risk. One health emergency can derail the plan.
₹60,000–1 Lakh/month
Corpus needed: ₹2–3 Crore
📍 Tier-1 metros (Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune)
Comfortable. Can afford good healthcare, occasional international travel, children in decent private schools. Realistic target for most professionals.
⚠ Risk: Medium. Needs a 5–10% annual return on corpus to be sustainable.
₹2 Lakh+/month
Corpus needed: ₹6–10 Crore
📍 Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi (or anywhere)
Full lifestyle freedom. Private education, business class travel, luxury lifestyle, home ownership. Requires a high income phase to accumulate.
⚠ Risk: Low financial risk, high accumulation challenge.
Savings Rate — The Most Powerful FIRE Lever
Your savings rate determines your FIRE timeline more than your return rate. Here's a simple illustration assuming 11% investment return and 6% inflation:
| Savings Rate | Years to FIRE (approx) | Real-world Context |
|---|---|---|
| 10% | 40+ years | Typical salaried person — standard lifestyle, EMIs |
| 20% | 30–35 years | Slightly frugal, no major loans |
| 35% | 22–25 years | Disciplined saver, renting, no car EMI |
| 50% | 15–17 years | Frugal-moderate, dual income helps |
| 65% | 10–12 years | High income + very frugal, or very high income |
| 75%+ | 7–9 years | Extreme frugality or very high income (₹30L+ p.a.) |
Notice that going from 10% to 20% savings only saves you 5–10 years. But going from 20% to 50% cuts your timeline by half. The math rewards aggressive saving disproportionately.
What to Include (and Exclude) in Your FIRE Corpus
✓ Count in FIRE Corpus
- • Equity mutual funds (accessible)
- • Direct stocks (accessible)
- • Debt funds / liquid funds
- • EPF (with maturity date consideration)
- • PPF (after 15-year lock-in)
- • Fixed deposits (partial, for stability)
- • REITs / InvITs (for income)
✗ Exclude from FIRE Corpus
- • Your primary home (you live in it)
- • Locked EPF you can't access for years
- • NPS Tier 1 (locked till 60)
- • Business equity (illiquid, variable value)
- • Inherited property (until sold)
- • Insurance policies with low surrender value
FIRE Corpus by Indian City (at ₹75,000/month lifestyle)
| City Type | Example Cities | Adjusted Monthly Spend | FIRE Corpus (3.5% SWR) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier-3 / Rural | Mysuru, Nashik, Dehradun | ₹35,000 | ≈ ₹1.2 Crore |
| Tier-2 | Indore, Coimbatore, Jaipur | ₹55,000 | ≈ ₹1.9 Crore |
| Tier-1 (non-Mumbai) | Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune | ₹75,000 | ≈ ₹2.57 Crore |
| Bangalore | Bangalore | ₹90,000 | ≈ ₹3.1 Crore |
| Mumbai / Delhi NCR | Mumbai, Gurgaon, Noida | ₹1,20,000 | ≈ ₹4.1 Crore |
* Based on equivalent lifestyle cost differences across cities. Your actual corpus depends on personal expenses, healthcare, children's education, and lifestyle choices.
I've seen a lot of people get excited about FIRE after reading US blogs, calculate a number like ₹2 crore, and assume they're done. Then they forget three things: inflation (what costs ₹75,000/month today will cost ₹1.8 lakh in 15 years), healthcare (a single serious illness in a private Mumbai hospital can cost ₹10–30 lakh), and sequence of returns risk (retiring at the start of a bear market is devastating without a buffer). My recommendation: target 30× annual expenses as your corpus, not 25×. That extra 5× is your safety net for all three risks above.
Last reviewed: May 2026 · About the author
Frequently Asked Questions
What is FIRE and how does it work in India?+
How is the FIRE number calculated?+
Is the 4% withdrawal rate safe in India?+
What's the difference between Lean FIRE, Regular FIRE, and Fat FIRE in India?+
How does savings rate affect FIRE timeline?+
Should I count EPF/PPF in my FIRE corpus?+
Assumptions & Data Sources Citations
The parameters and calculations in this planner are based on historical Indian financial data and guidelines from official bodies:
- Long-Term Inflation: Inflation expectations are based on CPI benchmarks from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The RBI's medium-term CPI inflation target is anchored at 4%, with historical consumer price inflation averaging 5.0% to 6.5% over the past decade. Read more on the Reserve Bank of India Website.
- Safe Withdrawal Rate (SWR): While the US standard is the 4% rule (from the Trinity Study), Indian research and the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) statistics highlight that higher local inflation requires a more conservative SWR of 3% to 3.5% for capital preservation. Explore returns data on the AMFI India Website.
- Historical Market Growth: The 12% to 13% pre-retirement CAGR benchmark is derived from 20-year historical return averages of the Nifty 50 Index managed by NSE India (2004–2024). View index statistics on the NSE India Website.
- Regulatory Context: All calculations assume compliance with capital gains tax codes outlined by the Income Tax Department of India and guidelines by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).