Coast FIRE at Age 24
$6,000/month retirement spending
The amount you need invested today — at age 24 — so compound interest carries your portfolio to full retirement by age 65, with no further contributions.
Your Coast FIRE Number
$243,507
Age 24 · $6,000/mo · 5% real return · Retire at 65
What This Number Means
If you have $243,507 invested right now at age 24, your retirement is funded. You can stop contributing to your 401(k), IRA, or any other retirement account. Your current portfolio will compound to $1,800,000 by age 65 at a 5% real annual return — enough to support $6,000/month in retirement indefinitely at a 4% withdrawal rate.
This is what Coast FIRE means: you reach a portfolio size where time, not contributions, does the remaining work. You still need income to cover current living expenses. But saving for retirement becomes optional from this point forward.
How This Is Calculated
Step 1 — Retirement Target
$6,000/mo × 12 months = $72,000/year
$72,000 ÷ 4% withdrawal rate = $1,800,000 retirement target
Step 2 — Discount to Today
41 years of compounding at 5% real return
Growth factor: 1.0541 = 7.39x
$1,800,000 ÷ 7.39 = $243,507
Coast Number at Different Return Rates
Same retirement target ($1,800,000), same age (24), same retirement date (65). Only the assumed return changes.
| Real Return | Assumption | Coast FIRE Number |
|---|---|---|
| 4% real | Conservative (7% nominal − 3% inflation) | $360,500 |
| 5% real ✓ | Baseline (8% nominal − 3% inflation) | $243,507 |
| 6% real | Optimistic (9% nominal − 3% inflation) | $165,094 |
| 7% real | Aggressive (10% nominal − 3% inflation) | $112,341 |
Why Age 24 Has 41 Years of Compounding Power
At age 24, you have 41 years until the standard retirement age of 65. At a 5% real return, every dollar invested today multiplies by 7.39x over that period. This is why the coast number is significantly lower than the retirement target — time is doing most of the work.
Someone early in your career who hits their coast number is in an exceptionally strong position. The combination of a meaningful invested balance and substantial time remaining is the foundation of financial independence — even if full retirement is still years away.
How long until you reach $243,507?
Enter your current balance and monthly contribution to see exactly when you'll cross your coast number.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What if I have less than $243,507 invested right now? +
You have not yet hit your coast number. Keep contributing to retirement accounts and run your numbers in the Coast FIRE calculator to find out how many more years of contributions you need.
Does my $243,507 coast number include Social Security? +
No. This calculation ignores Social Security completely, which is the conservative approach. If you receive Social Security payments in retirement, your actual required portfolio is lower — so you may hit your effective coast number sooner than this figure suggests.
What accounts count toward my $243,507? +
All invested assets: 401(k), 403(b), Roth IRA, traditional IRA, taxable brokerage accounts, and the invested portion of an HSA. Does not include your emergency fund, home equity, cash savings, or non-invested assets.
Should I completely stop contributing when I hit $243,507? +
Not necessarily. Hitting your coast number means retirement at 65 is funded at your current spending level. Continuing to contribute simply moves your retirement date earlier, or increases your retirement income. The coast number is the floor, not the ceiling.
What if I want to retire before 65? +
Your coast number will be higher because you have fewer years of compounding. Use the Coast FIRE calculator to model an earlier retirement age and find the coast number for your specific target date.
Related Calculators & Guides
All calculations use real (inflation-adjusted) returns at 5% annually, a 4% safe withdrawal rate, and a retirement age of 65. Results are in today's dollars. This is educational content and not personalised financial advice. Individual results will vary based on actual market performance, inflation, and spending patterns.