Why does my Financial Independence data look different than it did last year?

We improved the accuracy of the 2025 Financial Independence tab by fine-tuning two important variables:

In 2024, we looked at the difference between your post-tax income and your planned spending, and assumed you were saving the rest for retirement.

โŒ Why this wasnโ€™t ideal: This estimate was a good rough projection, but many users save income for other medium-term goals (like college, down payments, etc.) that arenโ€™t going to be used for financial independence. Because of this, some usersโ€™ expected annual long-term savings were inflated.

โœ… How we improved this: In the 2025 Wealth Planner, you tell us when you fill out your Dashboard tab exactly how much money you intend to contribute to your long-term savings each month by selecting โ€œLong-Term (Financial Independence)โ€ from the timeline dropdown. This way, only savings contributions you intend to use for long-term investments will count toward your FI goal.

In 2024, we always referenced your most recent current invested assets and added 12 months of your projected savings for the current year.

โŒ Why this wasnโ€™t ideal: Once most of the year had already passed, the estimated end-of-year invested balance was inflated by expected contributions that had already happened.

โœ… How we improved this: In the 2025 Wealth Planner, only your first monthโ€™s invested assets will be used as the baseโ€”and the rest of the yearโ€™s savings contributions will be assumed based on your goals.


If things still look really different, be sure to checkโ€ฆ

  1. That your spending hasnโ€™t changed. Even a $1,000 increase in monthly spending can dramatically affect a financial independence timeline.

  2. That your invested assets are correct. Remember that only assets marked โ€œLong-Term (Financial Independence)โ€ will be counted toward your balance.


Other Useful Reminders

  1. Be careful not to cut & pasting cells. This can create #REF errors. (Copy & paste is fine.)

  2. Only change data in the white cells. Colored cells have formulas in them to make the Planner work!

  3. Avoid adding or deleting rows & columns. (Hiding rows and columns is fine.)