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What Your Financial Freedom Number Means
The Financial Freedom Number (FFN) in PocketPlan is a personalized retirement capital target.
It transforms your abstract retirement goals into a single, concrete number:
The minimum liquid net worth required to generate your desired income without working.
Unlike general retirement estimates, the FFN is based entirely on your inputs, assumptions, income sources, and projected lifespan.
🧮 Defining the Financial Freedom Number (FFN)
The FFN represents:
The total inflation-adjusted capital
Required in your retirement and investment accounts
On the first day of retirement
To sustain your lifestyle for life
It answers the question:
“How much money do I need saved to retire safely?”
Core Formula Concept
While exact modeling uses simulation and projections, the simplified concept is:
FFN = Total Capital Required − Present Value of Guaranteed Income
Guaranteed income includes:
Social Security
Pensions
Other predictable lifetime income streams
🔑 Key Principle: Bridging the Income Gap
The FFN is not equal to your total spending goal.
Instead, it calculates the gap between:
Your desired annual retirement spending
Minus guaranteed income sources
Your investment portfolio must be large enough to fill that gap safely for the rest of your life.
📊 Core Components That Influence the FFN
1️⃣ Desired Annual Spending
Your retirement lifestyle target.
Higher spending = higher FFN.
2️⃣ Guaranteed Income (Social Security, Pension)
Predictable annual income reduces the required FFN.
More guaranteed income = lower required capital.
3️⃣ Investment Returns & Volatility
Expected returns determine how efficiently your portfolio can generate income.
Higher expected returns (within realistic limits) reduce required capital.
4️⃣ Life Expectancy
Determines how long your capital must last.
Longer life expectancy = higher FFN.
🎯 Using the FFN to Guide Action
The FFN converts retirement from a vague aspiration into a measurable target.
✔ Measuring Progress
PocketPlan shows your progress as:
Current Savings ÷ FFN = Completion Percentage
This creates a clear milestone system.
✔ Validating Retirement Readiness
When your projected retirement portfolio exceeds your FFN:
Your Retirement Score typically moves into the 90%+ range
You are statistically well-positioned for success
✔ Stress Testing Financial Decisions
When you:
Increase retirement spending
Retire earlier
Adjust assumptions
Watch how the FFN changes.
If the FFN increases significantly, that decision carries financial weight.
📌 FFN vs Retirement Score
The two metrics work together:
| Metric | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Retirement Score | Probability of success |
| Financial Freedom Number | Exact capital target needed |
The Retirement Score tells you how safe you are.
The FFN tells you the number you must hit to get there.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Financial Freedom Number in PocketPlan?
The Financial Freedom Number is the total liquid capital required at retirement to sustainably generate your desired income for life.
How is the FFN calculated?
The FFN is calculated by determining the capital required to fund your retirement spending after subtracting guaranteed income sources such as Social Security and pensions.
Does the FFN include Social Security?
No. Social Security reduces the amount of capital required. The FFN only reflects the remaining income gap your portfolio must cover.
Why does my FFN change?
Your FFN may change if you:
Adjust retirement age
Increase spending goals
Modify life expectancy
Change investment return assumptions
Is the FFN the same as the Retirement Score?
No. The FFN is a capital target. The Retirement Score is a probability of success based on that target.
How can I lower my Financial Freedom Number?
You can lower your FFN by:
Reducing retirement spending
Increasing guaranteed income
Delaying retirement
Adjusting investment strategy (within realistic assumptions)
The Financial Freedom Number (FFN) in PocketPlan is the minimum inflation-adjusted capital required at retirement to generate your desired income for life. It calculates the gap between retirement spending goals and guaranteed income sources like Social Security and pensions. The FFN provides a clear savings target, while the Retirement Score measures the probability of reaching it successfully.

