Looking for financial independence? Follow ‘The Simple Path.’

Author and blogger JL Collins’s book “The Simple Path to Wealth: Your Road Map to Financial Independence and a Rich, Free Life” was published in 2016 and has since sold more than 1 million copies. It’s hands-down one of my favorite investing books.

Drumroll. He has now returned with a second edition of the book, which his daughter, Jess, collaborated on.

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I asked Collins to share some insights. Here are edited excerpts of our conversation.

What has changed since your first edition in terms of your philosophy? Anything you tweaked in this new edition?

JL Collins: Nothing. Zero. I designed the simple path to wealth to be something that you implement over decades. If it were to require major modification after a single 10-year period, I would not have designed it very well. The basic philosophy is the same, and that’s important. What has changed is all the little details — the government regulations around income limits for investing in 401(k)s and the amount of money you can put in individual retirement accounts and all that kind of stuff.

You kick off the book with your three key principles. Can you share?

Avoid debt, live on less than you earn, and invest the surplus — if you’re following my simple path, you’ll be doing that in low-cost index funds.

Avoiding debt, or getting out of it… is critical. You can never achieve financial independence if you’re dragging that particular ball and chain around. I’m a little appalled that in our culture, carrying debt has become (so) normalized that people sort of assume, well, of course I’m going to borrow money to buy this, that, or, or the other thing.

jl
“Avoid debt, live on less than you earn, and invest the surplus,” author JL Collins, pictured here, says are the keys to financial independence. (Photo courtesy of JL Collins)

How should we spend our money?

Spend money on what is most valuable to you. For me, there is nothing more valuable than buying my freedom, my freedom of time, my freedom of choice. You do that by having money and investments that ultimately pay all of your expenses.

How do you define financial independence? How is your approach aligned with the FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) movement?

I love the FIRE acronym. It’s very clever, and it’s a great goal if that’s your goal. Retiring early was never my goal. I like working. My goal was, and is, to have enough money to allow me to make bolder choices. Being financially independent means that you have enough money invested to throw off enough to cover all of your expenses and then some — a little bit of a cushion.

You write that 25 times your annual expenses is the amount you need to be financially independent. Explain.

There is the concept of what’s called the 4% rule. And what the 4% rule suggests, and I think it’s a great guideline, is that when you have enough money invested, that 4% of it will cover all of your expenses. Let’s suppose that you have a million dollars invested. Well, that throws off at 4%, $40,000 a year. So if you can live on $40,000 a year comfortably, you are now financially independent. If you need $100,000, you multiply it by 25, you’d be at $2.5 million.

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