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Show HN: MoneyOnFIRE

21 points| LambdaAndLatte | 10 months ago |moneyonfire.com

We’re Scott and Sunny—two long-time personal finance nerds. When we met 6 years ago we compared our personal finance spreadsheets. Ours were packed with macros, scenarios, and tax modeling—but even then, found they were not complete. Planning for financial independence is hard, and the cost of mistakes is high.

So we built the tool we always wanted: MoneyOnFIRE.

MOF calculates a personalized, tax-aware roadmap to financial independence—across account types, life goals, and withdrawal strategies. It shows you not just if you can achieve financial indepdendence, but how, when, and what to tweak to get there faster.

We’re still early and improving fast—would love your feedback!

24 comments

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chopete3|10 months ago

This is a very nifty tool. I started working on an excel sheet for this same purpose.

I created a plan to check it out. I couldn't find a few items.

1. Rental properties in the Assets

2. How to report the whole life insurance plans?

3. A scenario to invest in index funds.

Overall, a great start. Will bookmark this and check back later.

LambdaAndLatte|10 months ago

Thanks so much for the feedback!

1. Rental properties are coming in the next version. We want to get them right — especially the tax treatment and edge cases. Many people have rentals with slight negative cash flow each month, which they cover with income in hopes of long-term appreciation or principal paydown. Unlike primary residences, rental properties do count as income-producing assets toward financial independence, and we’re building that logic in.

2. We considered whole life insurance, but so far we’ve had very few requests for it. (We’ve actually had more interest in defined benefit pensions — though those are increasingly rare.)

3. We're also working on making investment recommendations clearer — this will be part of the next release. We actually do a lot in the back end we need to show.

And for your amusement — as hinted at in the post — our origin story also started with spreadsheets. When we (the two co-founders) met, we compared our personal finance spreadsheets, debated them over beers, and eventually merged the best of both. We thought our first product would be the ultimate “uber-sheet.” But once we added everything, the spreadsheet ballooned to hundreds of columns and took over 40 seconds to run... and testing it became a nightmare. That’s when we knew it was time to turn it into code. And that's how MoneyOnFIRE (MOF) was born.

lionkor|10 months ago

From what I can tell, this is only usable for US citizens, right? A load off those terms don't make sense in a social state like most western countries

LambdaAndLatte|10 months ago

Thank you for the feedback. We will make this more clear.

One of the features we have built to make planning more accurate is code up taxes (state, federa, account contribution limits, tax deductibility limits, taxes on withdrawals etc, etc, etc). We think this differentiates us from other simpler calculators that do a simple calculation of assets + savings * years. However, this does mean it is tailored to the US.

We have had few requests for UK and Canada. While there are differences the broad principles are the same. What country would you be interested in?

choppaface|10 months ago

Who has a $2.4m RSU package but only $330k remaining in a mortgage? The four dozen Google L7s who bought foreclosures in East Palo Alto?

LambdaAndLatte|10 months ago

Thanks for the feedback - we can pick a more representative plan for the front page / videos.

To add some more color: - Yes - unsurprisingly - we have found our initial users have strong representation from San Fran/FANG engineers and NY with high incomes. However, they are under half. We have users from almost every state and more 'normal' incomes. We were thinking of creating a blog with some aggregate data if it is of interest?

- What we also find is that the majority of the steps (what we call the 'waterfall') are consistent for most people. There are some differences (when 401k and IRA absorb most of peoples savings income).

- On housing specifically, this is a very common question. For people pursuing financial independence their primary residence does not count towards income generating assets (slightly different story if they plan to downsize). For people with very low mortgage rates then the most optimal planning is not to pay the mortgage off but to accumulate enough to offset it.

cyberax|10 months ago

I refinanced my mortgage during the heyday of COVID at 2%.

Why the heck would I pay it off?

abcd_f|10 months ago

A bit of bizarre time to release this at, isn't it?

This needs reasonably predictable markets and the economy to work ... both of which are currently lacking. The market yield and the inflation rate are now just two big blurs and the average answer will be "your FIRE is achievable within 7 to 177 years depending on random things that may or may not happen next".

LambdaAndLatte|10 months ago

You're right — if someone wants a super precise FIRE date, it gets tricky with volatility and short time horizons. We considered adding a range around the retirement date using different return scenarios, but some users found that too complex and preferred the current simplicity.

That said, we still believe it’s useful to focus on what is in your control: contributing to the right accounts in the right order, investing wisely, and minimizing fees. Those fundamentals work in any market, and over time, the ups and downs tend to average out.

antisthenes|10 months ago

FIRE was always a pipe dream throughout human history unless you were some kind of born-into-nobility royalty.

Markets being more chaotic and unpredictable is just reversion to the mean.

So it doesn't really matter when to release this tool. Might as well do it now.

frank20022|10 months ago

I don't see the problem. FIRE is long term game, if you are young, by the time where you would become FI this will look like just another blip.

kiwibyproxy|10 months ago

Maybe I'm not the target group if I don't know it, but the page not once explains what FIRE means/abbreviates.

nunez|10 months ago

Financial Independence/Retire Early.

jjav|10 months ago

If you want my feedback.. a web app where I'd enter financial information is a complete non-starter. I'm not sharing my financial information with an unknown third party (no offense, just unknown).

Software like this must be an application I run locally with zero internet connectivity.

LambdaAndLatte|10 months ago

No offense taken. We understand.

Its something we have considered. At this stage you can use a temp email and we don't link to bank accounts.

For the hacker news crowd - I am sure they would be comfortable downloading and running containers etc. In theory we could have an offline mode (though we do use some market data that updates semi frequently so we would have to release a new binary periodically)

For the general population that becomes less of an option. We have also seen an increasing comfort in people sharing select financial information (and APIs to more safely share and constrain banking information). We also think we have some neat ways to provide a lot more value without needing to sync as much information as others but thats for 2-3 versions down the line.