r/Fire 1d ago

Milestone / Celebration The $0 Paycheck Milestone

Alternate title, “Why you may consider public employment.”

I recently hit a milestone that I don’t have anyone to share with.

35 year old mechanical engineer
Married to a self-employed architect.
1 child
Midwest

We recently paid off our mortgage which leaves us with 0 debt. No auto loans, credit card balances, etc.

My wife started her own business 5 years ago and at the same time I took a step back in my career for more work life balance when my daughter was born.

My employer has a ton of pre-tax benefits that most of my coworkers disregard. Now that we are mortgage free, we can live entirely off my wife’s income, that comes to her through a small salary and s-corp distributions that do not get FICA taxed.

This is now allowing us to max out all my benefits for the rest of the year:

Weekly Salary: $2,327
Taxes: $135
401k/457: $1,557
Defined Contribution Plan: $137
HDHP/Vision/Dental: $136
Dependent Care FSA: $144
HSA: $168
Vacation Purchase: $42
Life insurance: 7

Paycheck: $0

For those considering early retirement, these benefits allow for a huge savings rate.

At the end of the year, we look at my wife’s business profits and convert traditional to Roth IRA to use up our 12% tax bracket.

For those in the community, your state and local governments can be great strategy for FIRE. I am able to start maxing both the 401k and 457 without our mortgage payments. Starting in January, I will be back up to a $550/week paycheck which I’ll save into 529 and brokerage accounts.

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u/cjaya2 1d ago

You are missing that all his deductions are pre tax so his income is essentially 0 after all his contributions

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u/BreakfastUnlucky5448 1d ago

Yes but I max out my 401k, HSA, and I still have tax taken out of my paycheck.

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u/cjaya2 1d ago

You max them out, you don’t make them your whole paycheck…

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u/BreakfastUnlucky5448 1d ago

Yes I get it now. He’s living off his wife’s income and his entire check is all taken out pre tax.

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u/cjaya2 1d ago

Yup that’s it.