HomeCoastFIRE ScenariosFor Freelancers and Self-Employed

CoastFIRE for Freelancers and Self-Employed

By Minh · Updated 2026-04-25 · 5 min read

Freelancers and Self-Employed have a specific CoastFIRE setup: typical incomes around $90,000, and primary tax-advantaged accounts in the Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA family. This guide walks through what those numbers look like and how a no-pension career changes the math.

Self-employed CoastFIRE plans hinge on contribution limits. A Solo 401(k) lets you contribute as both employer and employee — up to $70k/yr in 2026 if profits allow.
CoastFIRE at Age 35 for a Typical Freelancers and Self-Employed
$312,360
Based on $90,000 income, 60% replacement ratio, 5% real return
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CoastFIRE Numbers by Age for Freelancers and Self-Employed

AgeYears to 65CoastFIRE Today
25 40 $191,762
30 35 $244,742
35 30 $312,360
40 25 $398,659
45 20 $508,801
50 15 $649,373

The table assumes your retirement spending is 60% of your current income (~$54,000/yr) and a 5% real return on investments.

Account Strategy for Freelancers and Self-Employed

Freelancers and Self-Employed typically have access to Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA. Here's the priority order most fee-only planners recommend:

  1. Employer match first — contribute enough to capture every match dollar. This is a guaranteed return that beats every other investment.
  2. Max a Roth IRA if eligible ($7,000/yr in 2026; $8,000 if 50+). Income limits: phase out at $150–165k single / $236–246k MFJ in 2026.
  3. Max your primary workplace plan ($23,500 in 2026 for Solo; $31,000 if 50+).
  4. HSA if on a high-deductible plan — triple tax-advantaged, $4,300 single / $8,550 family.
  5. Brokerage for everything beyond that — taxable, but flexible, no contribution limits, and LTCG rates (15% for most) are friendlier than ordinary income.

What Could Go Wrong

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Frequently Asked Questions

What's a realistic CoastFIRE number for freelancers and self-employed?
At a typical income of $90,000 and assuming 60% income replacement in retirement, the CoastFIRE number for a 35-year-old is approximately $312,360. The full table above shows other ages.
Should freelancers and self-employed prioritize Solo 401(k) or Roth IRA?
Capture employer match first (free money), then prioritize Roth IRA at lower incomes (under $100k single / $200k MFJ) for tax-free growth. Above those incomes, the deduction in a Traditional Solo usually wins. Mega-backdoor Roth (if available) is the gold-standard top-up.
Without a pension, do I need to save more?
Compared to pension-eligible careers, yes — your portfolio has to do all the heavy lifting. The flip side: no vesting cliffs, full portability when you switch jobs, and your money is yours regardless of employer drama.
What's the biggest CoastFIRE mistake for freelancers and self-employed?
Self-employed CoastFIRE plans hinge on contribution limits. A Solo 401(k) lets you contribute as both employer and employee — up to $70k/yr in 2026 if profits allow.