
Maya Patel
Library tech. $72k income. Retiring at 42.
The story
Maya grew up watching her parents work gruelling hospitality hours well into their sixties. She decided early that she'd trade lifestyle inflation for freedom. She lives in a modest unit in Adelaide's inner west, cycles to work, and finds genuine joy in a life that costs very little โ cooking from scratch, reading voraciously, and hiking in the Adelaide Hills on weekends. Her government salary isn't flashy, but her savings rate is extraordinary.
At 31, Maya has already built $82k in non-super investments and $42k in super. The super figure is nothing special โ it's roughly the Australian median for her age and gender. But the $82k outside super? That's the result of ten years of packing her own lunch, having no car, and taking one $1,200 holiday a year. That's what separates her from most people her age. To her friends she seems to be missing out. To her, they're the ones who are trapped.
What FIRE means to Maya
Total autonomy over her time. She doesn't hate her job โ she hates the obligation. FIRE at 42 means she can volunteer at the library if she wants, or not. The point is choice.
Retirement plans
Slow-travel through Southeast Asia for a year (on a budget), then settle back in Adelaide. Volunteer at community gardens, write the novel she's been outlining for years, and potentially do a few casual library shifts if she feels like it.
Key challenge
She needs to bridge the 18-year gap between retiring at 42 and accessing super at 60 โ entirely from non-super investments. That's the hard part of lean FIRE in Australia. Her non-super portfolio will carry her through the 40s and 50s, thinning out year by year. By her early 60s, she'll be drawing down super directly. By 67, the Age Pension fills the rest. The numbers work โ but there's no fat in the plan.
The numbers
What is Lean FIRE?
Lean FIRE means retiring on a budget โ typically under $35k/year in Australian conditions. It requires keeping expenses permanently low and accepting that retirement won't include luxury spending. The trade-off is a much earlier retirement date. In Australia, lean FIRE pairs naturally with the Age Pension: by retiring early on modest savings, you preserve eligibility for full or near-full pension at 67, which makes the long-run numbers work even when the portfolio is modest.
The projection
Annual income sources in retirement
Stacked bars show where income comes from each year. Line shows target expenses.
Bars above the red line indicate surplus spending capacity (SWR floor > expenses)
โ Dashed vertical lines show ATO minimum pension drawdown rate step-ups (ages 65, 75, 80, 85, 90, 95). The ATO requires increasing minimum annual withdrawals from super pension accounts as you age โ causing the visible income jumps at each bracket.
Key insights
That's 18 years after FIRE โ the non-super portfolio must bridge this gap entirely.
Adds ~$28k/year in government support, reducing portfolio drawdown.
A savings rate above 30% is the engine that powers early retirement. Every dollar saved today compounds for decades.
Key takeaway
Lean FIRE in Australia isn't about dying with nothing โ it's about buying the years between 42 and 67 on your own terms. Maya's projection shows a tight but viable path: non-super bridges the gap, super and the pension carry the finish line. The system is actually built to catch people who retire early and live modestly.
What Maya did next
Maya hit her number at 42 โ right on schedule. The projection showed the full picture for the first time: non-super carrying her through the 40s and 50s, thinning steadily; super unlocking at 60 with enough to top up the drawdown; the Age Pension arriving at 67 and covering the bulk of her modest expenses from then on.
She'd always known the numbers worked. Seeing them play out year by year, decade by decade, made it impossible to keep pretending there was a reason to stay.
She gave notice the following Monday. Not with ceremony โ just a short email and a handshake. Now she volunteers at the library two days a week, on her own terms, and is three chapters into the novel she's been outlining for four years.
"The tight years are 52 to 59," she told a friend over coffee. "After that, it actually gets easier. The whole system is kind of designed for people like me โ I just had to get through the middle bit on my own."