At its core, financial independence means having the freedom to live life on your terms without financial worry. It’s not simply about retiring early or hitting a magic number in your bank account. It’s about creating a life where you can make choices based on what truly matters to you.
That freedom looks different for everyone. For one person, it’s the ability to step away from a 9-to-5 job. For another, it’s spending more time with family, supporting a cause, or traveling the world. Whatever your vision, the goal is the same: to build enough wealth and resilience to support a sustainable lifestyle without being dependent on employment or external financial help.
Achieving financial independence is more than a one-time milestone: it’s a multi-faceted journey that touches every part of your financial life. Here are four key ways to think about it:
This starts with defining what independence looks like for you. Is it early retirement? More time with your kids? Philanthropic giving? Once your goals are clear, the next steps (budgeting, saving, and investing wisely) become actionable. Tools like retirement calculators and budgeting apps can help, but having a personalized financial plan makes all the difference.
Living below your means, avoiding unnecessary debt, prioritizing health, and spending intentionally are all part of a financially independent lifestyle. Cultivating daily habits like frugality and intentional spending helps preserve wealth and reduce stress, especially over the long term.
Financial independence unfolds in stages: from your earning and saving years to retirement and beyond. Early in your career, the focus may be on maximizing income and saving aggressively. Later, you’ll fine-tune investment strategies, manage healthcare costs, and think more about wealth distribution and legacy. At each stage, adaptability is key.
This is perhaps the most important piece. Financial independence requires a mindset of discipline, resilience, and long-term thinking. It means viewing challenges as temporary, practicing gratitude, and staying informed about your financial landscape. Even high earners can fall short of independence without the right habits and perspective.
One of the biggest myths is that a high income automatically leads to financial independence. In reality, people at all income levels struggle to save or invest because of poor spending habits or inflated lifestyles. According to a 2024 Bank of America study 1 , nearly 50% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck, even among six-figure earners. Financial independence isn’t about how much you make; it’s about how much you keep.
Whatever your vision, the goal is the same: to build enough wealth and resilience to support a sustainable lifestyle without being dependent on employment or external financial help.
Achieving financial independence is complex, but you don’t have to do it alone. At Larson, our advisors are
fiduciaries, which means we’re legally and ethically required to act in your best interest. Here’s how we help guide your path:
Financial independence isn’t about a number: it’s about freedom, security, and peace of mind. Whether you’re just getting started or fine-tuning a plan that’s been years in the making, your Larson advisor is here to help you take the next right step. Because when your money is working for you, not the other way around, you have
the ability to flourish, in every season of life.
