What Electricians Should Know About FIRE
Electricians have the single biggest FIRE advantage over college-educated peers: time. Starting full-time earnings at 18–20 instead of 22–26 means 4–8 extra years of compound growth. An electrician who invests $500/month starting at age 20 will have more at 50 than a doctor investing $2,000/month starting at 32. Union electricians also get pension contributions and benefits that function as forced FIRE savings. The key is treating apprenticeship years as your wealth foundation — invest early and let time do the heavy lifting.
How the 4% Rule Works for Electricians
The 4% rule suggests you need 25 times your annual spending to retire safely. With an average electrician salary of $62,000 and estimated annual spending of $40,300, the FIRE number comes to approximately $1,007,500. That’s the portfolio size where investment returns can cover your living expenses indefinitely.
Steps to Reach FIRE
- Track your actual spending. The national average may not reflect your lifestyle. Knowing your real number is the foundation of every FIRE plan.
- Maximize tax-advantaged accounts. Use your 401(k), 403(b), IRA, and HSA to shelter as much income as possible from taxes.
- Invest the gap. The wider your savings rate, the faster you reach FIRE. Even a 5% increase in savings rate can shave years off your timeline.
- Consider Coast FIRE first. You may already have enough invested that compound growth alone will get you to a traditional retirement. Use the calculator to check.