A frugal accountant who can now retire aged 34 says anyone earning the UK's average wage of £27,000 can give up work early as long as they follow his golden rules.
Ken Okoroafor has saved half his salary every year since 2006 after moving to the cheapest area he could find that still allowed him to commute to London.
Mr Okoroafor and his wife Mary, who have already paid off the mortgage on their Dartford home, spend no more than £50 per week on food and claim giving up luxuries like red meat is the best way to slash a supermarket bill.
Shopping for gadgets is banned - they have a TV but no iPads or other electronics - and any major purchases like a car must be planned a minimum of a year in advance - and never bought on credit.
He told MailOnline: 'It's possible for anyone to achieve early retirement within 20 years, but they'll need be ready for a big lifestyle change'.
Ken Okoroafor (pictured with wife Mary), 34, moved to London from Lagos, Nigeria, at 14 with no savings
Mr Okoroafor and wife of seven years, Mary, chose to do without luxuries to live a financially secure life with sons Joshua (left), five and Elias (right), three
The father-of-two is one of thousands of Britain's 'strong-willed super-savers’ who hold back up to 75 per cent of their salaries and often resist spending a single penny for five days a week.
They follow the Financial Independence Retire Early (FIRE) formula – an idea born in the US - which suggests investing savings in low-risk stocks and buy-to-let properties that will eventually provide the monthly cash needed to retire early.
Mr Okoroafor and his wife have slashed their spending to a minimum by buying an electric car and shopping in Aldi.
The Nigerian-born Briton went from a Topshop assistant to a debt-free chartered accountant in just over ten years.
He started saving in 2006 on a £26,000 salary and says anyone, no matter their current wage, can do the same with a few simple lifestyle changes.
He told MailOnline: 'In terms of numbers, I'd typically tell people to aim to save 25 times their annual expenses to achieve financial independence.
'They should aim to put away 50 per cent of their wage every month. I started using that technique in 2009 when I met my wife.
'Then they need to start thinking big picture. Where do they live? Can they move somewhere cheaper?
'I had to move out of London to Dartford because we could buy a cheap house and work on paying off the mortgage.
'Anyone looking to save needs to be ready to cut out luxuries like that. I drive a second-hand 2013 Nissan Leaf, which is electric and very low cost.
'We charge the car at home and have a limit on our electricity every month, so we don't overspend.
'Before making any big purchase - like a car- try think ahead. Try to plan the big purchase about a year in advance so that you can budget for it.
'Buy a car that'll last you for years. And don't get it on finance, make sure you're not increasing your monthly expenses.'
The savvy spender is happily married to his wife of seven years, Mary, and the pair have two young sons – Joshua, five and Elias, three.
Mr Okoroafor grew up in the bustling City of Lagos and moved to London as a 14-year-old.
He said his humble beginnings taught him to appreciate money and do without luxuries.
He said: 'I learned to save through values passed on by my parents. My mother and father were immigrants and we were forced indirectly to save, to make sure we had enough to get by the following day.
'I think modern society makes people think they need the latest car or phone. But the truth is they don't.
'We feed our family-of-four on £50 per week. We shop at Aldi. Kids can be notoriously expensive but we don't have iPads and other electronics in the house.
The family's weekly food shop costs just £50 from Aldi, and they've given up red meat to keep costs down
The chartered accountant plans big purchases - like a car - one year in advance, to budget correctly
Mr Okoroafor worked in Topshop while studying Economics and Accountancy at City, University of London, to pay off his student fees.
While he acknowledges that the cost of studying nowadays is higher than when he was in education, he still advises students to work a job around their studies.
Barney Whiter, a married father-of-three from Farnham, Surrey, walked away from work at 43 by saving half his annual salary after tax.
'I didn't take student loan when I was at university. Even at that young age I knew I didn't want to be in debt. I got a part time job at Topshop where I'd work at the weekend. It paid for my £1100-a-year study fees.'
The self-made saver offers a guide on how much money you should be saving on his website The Humble Penny.
He stressed that while his methods can help people achieve early retirement, he would rather promote 'financial independence'.
He said: 'I think working is important for individuals and communities. I want people to have financial freedom and the option to retire early.
'But I'd like to encourage people to keep working. Find a job that they love. Because I think work is important.'
Mr Okoroafor is one of thousands of middle-earners able to retire in their forties with no mortgage and £25,000 a year to spend.
Experts say anyone can 'go from broke to never needing to work again' by saving 50 per cent or even 75 per cent of their salary each month.
These 'super-savers' then invest it in property and low-risk shares for ten to 20 years and bank the profits every year.
The financial independence retire early [FIRE] formula - an idea born in the US - is inspiring thousands in the UK to achieve the ultimate aspiration of giving up work.
Experts say you need a nest egg equivalent to 25 times your annual salary to retire early.
This means that if you must have £25,000-a-year to live on you need to work towards a nest egg of £625,000 made up of savings and returns from investments or buy-to-let properties.
If it is £50,000 then that amount grows to £1.25million.
If you need £25,000-a-year to live you need to work towards a nest egg of £625,000 before giving up work (file picture)
The other battle line is to eliminate a mortgage using the half of the salary people don't save.
The Holy Grail for anyone who wants to leave work before 65 is saving - because if you want a scatter-cash lifestyle then you will pay for it in many more years at work.
Many take their inspiration from the 5:2 diet, meaning for full five days of the week they do not spend a penny only allowing themselves to have any outlays on the other two days.
London accountant Barney Whiter, a married father-of-three from Farnham, Surrey, walked away from work at 43 by saving half his annual salary after tax.
He then invested all of it in low-risk stock market funds and shares, bringing in up to 12 per cent return every year for 19 years while also paying down his mortgage.
A big house, eating out, expensive holidays, new cars, cable TV and non-essential shopping were all banned so the Whiter family could stick to their £24,000-a-year budget for all spending.
Frugal Mr Whiter made sure he built up a net worth of 25 times his annual spend - £625,000 - in savings and investments.
And the result was retirement around 20 years before his colleagues, which he said 'is the best thing since slice bread'.
He told The Times: 'If you can save 50 per cent of your take-home pay, it will take 19 years to go from broke to never needing to work again. If you can save 75 per cent, it will take seven to eight years.
'You need to have the mentality of a marathon runner or triathlete and be able to delay gratification. For most people money is leaking out of their life like a bucket shot full of holes'.
There is an army of super-savers in the UK, many gaining inspiration from U.S. and British websites that advise on how to become mortgage-free early.
More than 100,000 people are said to be using blogs produced by FIRE proponents including Mr Whiter, who calls himself 'The Escape Artist'.
Earlier this year more than 900 people tried to get into a London pub to hear a talk about the formula, spearheaded by Canadian Peter Adeney, who retired at 30.
Mr Adeney's blog Mr Money Moustache gives people a step-by-step guide to retiring in a decade or less.
Mr Whiter threw all his energy behind his plan to retire in his forties.
He drove a battered second hand Skoda for years and cut spending to the bone while his children, now teenagers, grew up.
But he insists it was all worth it.
He said: 'Tasting freedom is the most intoxicating thing and I wouldn’t ever go back to full-time work. I’d rather cut my lifestyle back. My highest value is freedom and self-determination and being able to do what I want to do'.
Linkhienalouca.comhttps://hienalouca.com/2018/09/18/london-accountant-is-one-of-thousands-of-brits-who-can-retire-in-their-30s-and-40s-by-saving/
Main photo article A frugal accountant who can now retire aged 34 says anyone earning the UK’s average wage of £27,000 can give up work early as long as they follow his golden rules.
Ken Okoroafor has saved half his salary every year since 2006 after moving to the cheapest area he could find that still ...
It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.
Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.
Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca
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