FIRE · Americas
FIRE in Tucson
United States · $2,620/mo expenses · 4% rule
FIRE number
$786,000
$2,620/mo × 12 ÷ 4%
Best for: Cost-conscious desert nomads who want Sonoran landscapes and a real college-town core.
Nomad arbitrage
FIRE number in Tucson
$786,000
$2,620/mo × 25
FIRE number at $5K/mo (US)
$1,500,000
US-typical baseline
Years saved
~9.0 years sooner
Same saver, different city
Representative saver: $50,000 invested, $2,000/mo contribution, 5% real return, 4% safe withdrawal rate.
Time to FI at three starting points
Assuming your monthly burn matches Tucson’s mid-tier nomad budget ($2,620/mo) at 5% real return.
Just starting
$0 saved, $1,500/mo invested
23y 2mo
Mid-career
$200K saved, $2,500/mo invested
11y
Late starter
$500K saved, $1,500/mo invested
5y 9mo
Field notes
Meaningfully cheaper than Phoenix with a denser walkable downtown (4th Avenue, Sam Hughes, the Mercado district) and the same Arizona tax footprint. Summer is hotter than Phoenix relative to infrastructure — fewer people, more outdoor lifestyle, more brutal when 110°F lands. The University of Arizona shapes the energy; nomad coworking is concentrated near downtown and 4th Ave.
Visa for nomads
Low nomad-friendlyPathway
Extendable tourist
Program
—
Typical max stay
6 months
ESTA Visa Waiver (90 days) for most western passports, no extensions in-country; B-2 visitor visa up to 6 months. No US digital-nomad visa exists. Long-term residence requires H-1B / O-1 / EB green-card paths.
Editorial summary, not legal advice. Verify with the relevant consulate before applying — visa programs change with little notice.
How Tucson compares
Same representative saver, four reference nomad cities.
| City | Monthly | FIRE number | Years to FI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tucson | $2,620 | $786,000 | 17y 5mo |
| Lisbon | $1,980 | $594,000 | 14y 2mo |
| Berlin | $2,540 | $762,000 | 17y 1mo |
| Bangkok | $1,430 | $429,000 | 10y 10mo |
| Mexico City | $1,970 | $591,000 | 14y 1mo |
Dig deeper into Tucson
Cities at a similar FIRE timeline
Editorial estimates. Not financial advice. The 4% rule is a planning anchor, not a guarantee — sequence-of-returns risk and tax-jurisdiction friction (US-LLC / FEIE / state residency) can move the real number meaningfully. See our expat tax directory for the cross-border side of the math.