The Core Calculation
At its simplest, Time to Freedom asks: at what point does my growing portfolio generate enough annual dividend income to match my annual expenses? The calculation runs forward in time, adding contributions and reinvested dividends each year, until the income line crosses the expense line.
Each year in the model has three moving parts: your existing portfolio earns dividends at the current yield, those dividends get reinvested to buy more shares, and you add fresh capital. The portfolio grows from all three sources simultaneously.
Year-by-Year Mechanics (Simplified)
- • Start of year: Portfolio value × yield = annual dividend income
- • Reinvestment: Annual dividends buy additional shares at current price
- • Contributions: Monthly savings added to portfolio
- • End of year: New portfolio = old portfolio + DRIP shares + contributions
- • Repeat until annual income >= income target
The Five Inputs That Shape Your Number
Current Portfolio Value
Your starting point. A larger existing portfolio means more dividends reinvested from day one, compressing the timeline. Someone starting at $200,000 will reach the same income goal significantly faster than someone starting at $0, even with identical monthly contributions.
Monthly Contribution
In the early years, contributions dominate the portfolio growth. The dividend income from a $30,000 portfolio is modest — your $1,500/month contribution may be larger than the annual dividends. As the portfolio grows, DRIP takes over as the primary growth driver. Contribution rate is the most controllable input you have.
Portfolio Yield
The assumed dividend yield on your portfolio. This should be your realistic blended yield — not the highest-yield position you own. A 1 percentage point difference in assumed yield (4% vs. 5%) changes your required portfolio size by 20% and shifts your timeline by several years.
Dividend Growth Rate
If you hold dividend-growth stocks, their payouts increase annually. A 5% dividend growth rate means your income grows even if you never add another dollar. Over 15 years, a portfolio with 5% annual dividend growth generates roughly 2× the income of one with 0% growth — at the same portfolio size.
Income Target
What monthly income do you need from dividends? This is the finish line. Setting it too low means you run out of income before your expenses are covered. Setting it correctly requires accounting for inflation — your $3,500/month target today needs to be closer to $4,700/month in 10 years at 3% annual inflation.
Which Input Moves the Date Most?
Contribution rate has the largest impact in early years. Yield assumption has the largest impact on required portfolio size. Dividend growth rate has the most dramatic effect over longer timelines. Run the same scenario with different values for each input — the results will tell you where to focus your energy.
Sensitivity Example: $50K Portfolio, $1,500/month, $4,000/month Target
- • Base case (5% yield, 3% DGR): 18.2 years
- • Increase contributions to $2,000/month: 15.4 years (-2.8 yrs)
- • Increase yield to 6%: 16.1 years (-2.1 yrs)
- • Increase DGR to 6%: 16.8 years (-1.4 yrs)
- • All three combined: 12.3 years (-5.9 yrs)
The Assumption That Trips Most Investors Up
Most Time to Freedom calculations assume the portfolio yield stays constant. In practice, yields fluctuate as prices change and as you add or remove positions. A portfolio that yields 5% today may yield 4.2% in three years if the market has run up. Build in a margin of safety — plan for 4%, hope for 5%.
⚠ Use the Calculator as a Compass, Not a GPS
Your Time to Freedom number will shift as markets move, dividends change, and your contributions evolve. Check it annually — not to obsess over the exact date, but to confirm you're still heading in the right direction.
Prospyr's Time to Freedom Calculator runs this model with your actual numbers and shows you the year-by-year income progression — so you can see the compounding curve, not just the end date.
Calculate your Time to Freedom
Enter your portfolio, contributions, yield, and income target to see your timeline — and which inputs move the date most.
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This is informational only, not licensed financial advice. Prospyr does not recommend specific securities or investment strategies. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.