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Retire Early, Live Free—Rethinking FIRE, Indian Style

Mint Chennai

|

June 16, 2025

Rising expense, health gaps and family duties make FIRE hard—diversify to build stability

- Rushi Anandan

The FIRE movement—financial independence, retire early—is fast gaining ground in India as more people seek freedom from corporate life. But with evolving work norms, healthcare needs and financial uncertainties, adapting FIRE to Indian realities requires a different playbook.

The core tenets: FIRE is about achieving financial independence by saving and investing enough to support your lifestyle without active income. It follows a three-pronged approach: save aggressively, spend frugally, and invest wisely. Advocates aim for a savings rate of 50% or more, and investments generating passive income. The goal is to reach a "crossover point" where passive income exceeds living expenses, enabling early retirement. This isn't a one-size-fits-all model, especially in India, where cultural attitudes around money are shaped by familial obligations, social expectations, and economic disparities, demanding a shift in traditional mindsets.

India-specific challenges

Rising expenses and inflation: Rising living costs are the biggest hurdle to FIRE in India, with inflation in essentials like health, education and housing posing a major challenge.

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