Financial clarity is not about knowing everything. It is about knowing the right things. Most people track their salary and their checking account balance — and nothing else.
Here are the seven numbers that actually define your financial health. Some you may know. Most you probably do not. All of them are calculable today, in minutes.
1. Your Net Worth
Formula: Total Assets − Total Liabilities
Why it matters: Net worth is the complete picture of your finances — not just what comes in each month, but the cumulative result of every financial decision you have ever made. It is the one number that tells the full story.
How to calculate it: List every asset (bank accounts, investments, property, vehicles) and every liability (mortgages, loans, credit card balances). Subtract one from the other.
Target: Growing. Any positive trajectory is progress. For FIRE, you are aiming for 25× your annual expenses.
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2. Your Savings Rate
Formula: Monthly Savings ÷ Monthly After-Tax Income × 100
Why it matters: This is the most important number in personal finance. It determines not just how much you save, but how quickly your wealth grows relative to your lifestyle cost. A 50% savings rate means you could retire in approximately 17 years starting from zero — regardless of your income.
How to calculate it: Take your monthly savings (including pension contributions and employer match) divided by your take-home pay, times 100.
Target: 20% is the 50/30/20 baseline. 50%+ is FIRE territory. Track this number monthly — it is the clearest signal of your financial velocity.
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3. Your FIRE Number
Formula: Annual Expenses in Retirement ÷ 0.04
Why it matters: This is your target — the amount you need invested to live indefinitely without working. The 4% denominator comes from the Trinity Study: historically, a portfolio equal to 25× your annual expenses has a 95%+ chance of lasting 30+ years.
How to calculate it: Estimate what you will spend in retirement per year. Divide by 0.04. That is your FIRE Number.
Example: £30,000/year in retirement → FIRE Number = £750,000
Target: This varies by lifestyle. Lean FIRE might be £500,000. Fat FIRE might be £3,000,000. What matters is having a specific target to aim at.
Calculate your FIRE number →
4. Your Debt-to-Income Ratio
Formula: Monthly Debt Payments ÷ Monthly Gross Income × 100
Why it matters: Lenders use this number to assess credit risk. You should use it to assess your financial flexibility. A high DTI means too much of your income is already committed before you make any choices.
How to calculate it: Add up all your monthly debt payments (mortgage, car, credit cards, loans). Divide by your gross monthly income. Multiply by 100.
Benchmarks:
Target: Below 35%, ideally below 20% once your mortgage-free period begins.
5. Your Emergency Fund Coverage
Formula: Emergency Fund Balance ÷ Monthly Expenses
Why it matters: This tells you how many months you could survive without any income. It is your financial immune system — the buffer that prevents a job loss, medical bill, or car repair from becoming a debt spiral.
How to calculate it: Take your total emergency fund (savings account, not investments) and divide by your average monthly expenses.
Benchmarks:
Target: 3 months minimum. 6 months if you are self-employed, a single income household, or pursuing early retirement.
6. The Future Value of Your Current Savings
Formula: FV = P × (1 + r/12)^(12×t)
Why it matters: Most people think of their savings account balance as static. It is not. Every pound invested today will grow by compound interest. Knowing what your current savings will become in 10, 20, or 30 years changes how you feel about investing — and how you feel about spending.
How to calculate it: Use the formula above (where P = current balance, r = annual return rate, t = years), or simply use a compound interest calculator.
Example: £20,000 invested today at 7% annual return:
Target: There is no target — it is about awareness. Once you see these numbers, "spending now vs. investing now" takes on a different meaning.
Calculate your future value →
7. Your Wealth Doubling Time
Formula: 72 ÷ Annual Return Rate = Years to Double
Why it matters: The Rule of 72 is the fastest way to understand compound growth. It tells you how long it takes for your money to double at a given rate of return.
How to calculate it: Divide 72 by your expected annual return.
Examples:
This is also why fees matter so much. An investment platform charging 1.5% in annual fees reduces a 9% return to 7.5% — which shifts your doubling time from 8 years to 9.6 years. Over 30 years, that difference can mean hundreds of thousands of pounds.
Target: Know this number for your current portfolio mix. Most diversified equity portfolios aim for 7-9% returns over long periods.
Putting It All Together
These seven numbers create a complete financial picture:
You do not need to optimise all seven at once. Pick the one that is furthest from a healthy range and focus there for 90 days. Small, consistent improvements across all seven will compound — exactly like money does.
Start calculating with our free financial tools →