Retirement

The 4% Rule Explained: Retirement Withdrawal Strategy & FIRE Calculator

Learn how the 4% rule works for retirement withdrawals, its origins in the Trinity Study, modern adjustments, and how to calculate your FIRE number.

Published: March 1, 2026

The 4% Rule Explained: Retirement Withdrawal Strategy & FIRE Calculator

What Is the 4% Rule?

The 4% rule states you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio in year one of retirement, then adjust for inflation annually, with a high probability of not running out of money over 30 years.

William Bengen introduced the 4% rule in 1994 after analyzing historical market returns going back to 1926. He found that a 4% initial withdrawal rate, adjusted for inflation each year, survived every 30-year period in U.S. market history.

The Trinity Study (1998) expanded on this research using different stock/bond allocations and confirmed the findings. A portfolio of 50-75% stocks and 25-50% bonds had a 95%+ success rate over 30 years.

Example: With a $1,000,000 portfolio, you withdraw $40,000 in year one. If inflation is 3%, you withdraw $41,200 in year two, regardless of portfolio performance.

How to Calculate Your FIRE Number Using the 4% Rule

Your FIRE number equals your annual expenses multiplied by 25 (the inverse of 4%).

The formula is simple:

FIRE Number = Annual Expenses × 25

If you spend $50,000/year, your target is $1,250,000. If you spend $80,000/year, you need $2,000,000.

This assumes the standard 4% withdrawal rate. For a more conservative 3.5% rate, multiply by ~28.6. For a more aggressive 4.5% rate, multiply by ~22.2.

Use our FIRE number calculator to model different scenarios with your actual expenses and expected returns.

Does the 4% Rule Still Work Today?

The 4% rule remains a useful starting point but may need adjustment for today's lower expected returns and longer retirements.

Critics raise valid concerns:

  • Lower bond yields: The original research used periods with higher average bond returns than today.
  • Longer retirements: Early retirees may need 40-50 years of withdrawals, not 30.
  • Sequence-of-returns risk: Poor returns in the first few years of retirement can devastate a portfolio.
  • International diversification: The original study used only U.S. data, which had unusually strong performance.

Many financial planners now suggest 3.3-3.5% as a safer starting rate, especially for early retirees. Others recommend dynamic withdrawal strategies that adjust based on portfolio performance.

What Are Dynamic Withdrawal Strategies?

Dynamic strategies adjust your withdrawal rate based on portfolio performance, reducing withdrawals in bad years and increasing them in good years.

Popular alternatives to the fixed 4% rule include:

  • Guardrails method: Set upper and lower bounds (e.g., 3.5-5%). If your withdrawal rate drifts outside, adjust spending.
  • Percentage of portfolio: Withdraw a fixed percentage each year (e.g., 4% of current balance). Income varies but the portfolio never runs out.
  • Floor-and-ceiling: Guarantee essential expenses from stable income (Social Security, pensions, annuities) and use a higher withdrawal rate for discretionary spending.
  • Bond tent: Increase bond allocation in the 5 years before and after retirement to reduce sequence-of-returns risk.

Use our SWR drawdown calculator to simulate these approaches with your numbers.

How Should You Apply the 4% Rule in Practice?

Use the 4% rule as a planning target, not a rigid spending rule—then build flexibility into your withdrawal strategy.

Practical steps:

  1. Calculate your FIRE number as a savings target.
  2. Build a diversified portfolio of low-cost index funds (60-80% stocks, 20-40% bonds).
  3. Plan for flexibility—be prepared to cut discretionary spending by 10-20% in down markets.
  4. Consider part-time income in early retirement to reduce portfolio withdrawals.
  5. Reassess annually and adjust your withdrawal rate based on portfolio performance.

Remember: the 4% rule is a guideline, not a guarantee. The best retirement plan includes multiple income sources and spending flexibility.

Daniel Lance
Personal Finance Writer

Daniel covers compound interest, retirement planning, and debt payoff strategies at InterestCal. His goal is to break down complex financial concepts into clear, actionable insights.

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