[Serious] Inflation Just Exploded My FIRE Number – How Do You Stay Hopeful?

26M here, my current FI number is $2.5M (based on today’s expenses), but after adjusting for inflation over 30 years?

  • At 2% inflation: 2.5M∗1.02^30 = 4.5M
  • At 3% inflation: 2.5M∗1.03^30 = 6.1M

This absolutely obliterates my motivation. Suddenly, what felt achievable now feels like chasing a mountain that grows faster than I can climb.

Am I missing something? How do you all factor inflation into your long-term plans without losing hope? Do you:

  1. Assume aggressive investment returns to outpace inflation?
  2. Plan to save way more than your current FI number?
  3. Rely on geoarbitrage, side hustles, or other variables?
  4. Just… ignore it and hope inflation stays low?

Honestly, this math has me questioning whether FIRE is even feasible for someone starting early with a long timeline. Any strategies, success stories, or tough-love advice welcome.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Update Based on Community Feedback:
Wow, thank you all for the incredible insights! Here’s a summary of what I’ve learned: 

Inflation-Adjusted Returns Matter Most:

  • Many of you emphasized using real returns (nominal returns minus inflation) in calculations. For example, assuming 7% returns already accounts for ~3% inflation (10% nominal - 3% inflation = 7% real). Double-counting inflation by projecting both higher FI numbers and lower returns is a mistake.

Investments (and Income) Grow Too:

  • Inflation doesn’t just raise expenses—it also lifts wages, investment returns, and asset values.

Stay in Today’s Dollars for Clarity:

  • Tracking progress in today’s dollars simplifies things. For example, if your FI number is $2.5M now, aim for that amount adjusted for real returns over time—not a nominal future number.

My Takeaway:
I was conflating nominal and real returns, which made the math feel impossible. Shifting to real returns (7% = 10% nominal - 3% inflation) restored some sanity.