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Ohio Cost of Living Comparison — Updated 2026

Ohio (OH) · State tax: 3.5% · Property tax: 1.56% · Median home (ZHVI): $225,000

As of May 2026 · Sources: Zillow ZHVI, Tax Foundation, Census ACS, Freddie Mac PMMS

Written by Jere Salmisto·Reviewed by CalcFi Editorial·Methodology
TL;DR

Ohio's top marginal state income tax rate is 0.04%. Median income: $80,520. Cost-of-living index: 92. Regional CPI YoY is running ~3.3%, vs ~3.2% nationally.

Source: Zillow ZHVI / Tax Foundation, 2026-05-21

Ohio's cost of living index is 91.9 compared to the national average of 100. This composite score reflects housing, groceries, utilities, transportation, and healthcare costs across the state. In Ohio, your money goes further — $100 buys what would cost approximately $91.9 in an average U.S. location. The median home price of $225,000 and 3.5% state income tax are two major drivers of overall living costs in Ohio.

Ohio Financial Snapshot (2026) — Cost of Living Comparison

Cost-of-living index and median income anchor the budget math for the cost of living comparison in Ohio. Every row cites a primary public dataset. Numbers reflect the most recent vintage available; refresh cadence is documented in the methodology.

MetricOhioSource
Cost-of-living index (BEA RPP)91.9 (US = 100)[1][1]
Median household income$80,520/yr[2][2]
Median home value (ZHVI)$225,000[3][3]
Property tax effective rate1.56%[4][4]
Minimum wage$10.70/hr[5][5]
Top marginal income tax rate3.50%[6][6]

How the Cost of Living Comparison Math Works Under Ohio Law

Your cost of living comparison in Ohio is driven by the BEA Regional Price Parity (RPP) — a purchasing-power index where US = 100. The all-items RPP tells you how far a dollar goes statewide vs the national average; housing-only RPP isolates the rent/mortgage side, which is the single biggest budget line for most households[1].

When the all-items RPP is above 100, the same expense basket costs more to maintain in Ohio. The 50/30/20 rule (needs/wants/savings) bends toward needs in high-RPP states and toward savings in low-RPP states.

Calc-specific note: COL index normalises everything to US = 100. Housing RPP + all-items RPP are the two dimensions that move together.

Worked example — Ohio

Ohio's BEA all-items RPP measures how far a dollar goes vs US = 100. $100 of mainstream-basket spending in Ohio costs $(RPP) in the US average. Housing RPP is usually the biggest swing component — run the housing tile separately when comparing metros.

Local context: Ohio

Housing economics in Ohio. The median home value runs 37.2% below the U.S. baseline for Ohio is $225,000 per Zillow's home-value index. Effective property tax sits at 1.56% of assessed value, meaningfully higher than the 0.99% national average tracked by the Tax Foundation. Lenders in Ohio have quoted 6.30% on the 30-year fixed product over the trailing four-week window per Freddie Mac PMMS — the prevailing posted rate before any borrower-specific lock-ins.

Income and tax climate. Median household income in Ohio reaches $80,520 per the ACS five-year vintage, pulling above the $78,538 U.S. median. Ohio's top marginal state income tax bracket lands at 3.50% — compared to the volume-weighted national average around 4-5%. BEA's Regional Price Parity scores Ohio at 91.9 (national = 100), meaning a dollar in Ohio buys 109¢ — more goods and services than the same dollar nationally.

How Ohio's cost basis informs the comparison. The cost-of-living comparison calculator weights housing, transportation, food, healthcare, and miscellaneous expenses using BEA Regional Price Parity for shelter and Council for Community and Economic Research C2ER index components for non-shelter categories. Housing is the dominant swing factor in most cross-state comparisons; the next-largest driver is state and local tax burden. Ohio's housing index plus its tax overlay together typically explain 70-80% of the variance against any other location you might compare against.

Local context as of 2026-06-04. Live data sources are listed in the Sources section below; each metric carries its own retrieval date.

Ohio versus the U.S. baseline

How does Ohio stack up against the national average on the metrics that drive the calculators on this page? The table below pairs the Ohio-specific reading against the U.S. baseline so you can see at a glance whether your local scenario runs above or below typical. Three to five percentage points of difference on most of these inputs translates into meaningful changes in calculator output — for example, a 50-basis-point difference in mortgage rate moves the monthly payment on a $400,000 30-year loan by roughly $130.

MetricOhioU.S. baselineDifference
Median home value[zillow]$225,000$358,000-37.2%
Property tax rate[tax-foundation]1.56%0.99%57.6%
Top marginal income tax[tax-foundation]3.50%~4.08% (volume-weighted)-0.6 pp
Cost-of-living index (RPP)[bea-rpp]91.9100.0-8.1 pts
Avg homeowners insurance[naic]$1,010/yr$1,754/yr-42.4%

How to use the Cost of Living Comparison

Walk through using the Cost of Living Comparison with Ohio-specific defaults pre-loaded from primary sources.

  1. Pre-fill with local dataEach calculator on this page loads with state- or city-specific defaults pulled live from primary sources (FRED, BLS, Zillow, Freddie Mac PMMS, IRS, BEA). The blue values shown next to each input are the local averages so you can see how your scenario compares to the typical case before changing anything.
  2. Override the inputs you controlChange any field to model your actual situation. The math reruns in your browser the moment you change a value — no signup, no API call, no data transmission. Hover over the small (i) icon next to each label to see the formula that field feeds and where the default came from.
  3. Read the derived valuesThe result panel shows the primary calculation (monthly payment, take-home pay, savings projection, etc.) plus the intermediate values that drive it. Each line item is labeled with the formula component it represents so you can verify the arithmetic against any agency publication, textbook, or competing calculator.
  4. Adjust assumptions and re-runMost calculators have a section for assumption inputs that are easy to overlook — annual raises, expected return, inflation, vacancy rate, depreciation schedule, marginal vs. effective tax treatment. The defaults are conservative; aggressive scenarios usually require explicit overrides.
  5. Save to "My Numbers"When the inputs match your reality, click Save to "My Numbers". The values persist to your device's local storage (IndexedDB) and reload automatically on your next visit. Nothing is transmitted to any CalcFi server — the saved-state feature is deliberately client-side only for privacy.
  6. Compare scenarios side by sideMost calculators offer a comparison view that shows two or more scenarios side by side. Use this to model decision points: 15-year vs 30-year mortgage, Roth vs Traditional IRA, salary vs hourly, lease vs buy. The comparison view also produces a shareable summary you can download as PNG or PDF.
★Reality Score— Bigger picture for Ohio — score your full money snapshot, free.See my full picture →
3-minute readout across rent, debt, and savings — not a credit pull.

Worked Examples: Cost of Living Comparison in Ohio Cities

Same formula, different inputs. Each city name links to its own pSEO page where the calculator is pre-filled with local medians.

CityMedian homeMedian rentHUD FMR 2BRMedian income
Columbus, OH$326,730$1,514/mo$1,400/mo$79,847
Cleveland, OH$244,469$1,419/mo$1,300/mo$68,507
Cincinnati, OH$305,195$1,549/mo$1,425/mo$79,490
Dayton, OH$170,000$1,321/mo$1,225/mo$69,752
Akron, OH$235,212$1,259/mo$1,150/mo$71,312

Sources: Zillow ZHVI + ZORI[1], HUD FMR[2], Census ACS[3], Freddie Mac PMMS[4].

How Ohio Compares to Neighboring States

Moving one state over changes the cost of living comparison numbers. Compare median home value (Zillow ZHVI), top marginal income tax rate, effective property tax rate, and the BEA all-items Regional Price Parity across Ohio and its border states.

StateMedian homeTop inc taxProp tax rateRPP (US=100)
Ohio (this page)$225,0003.50%1.56%91.9
Indiana equivalent$235,0003.00%0.85%92.1
Kentucky$205,0004.00%0.83%89.9
Michigan$245,0004.25%1.58%94.3
Pennsylvania equivalent$265,0003.07%1.49%97.4

Sources: Zillow ZHVI[1], state Departments of Revenue / Tax Foundation[2], Tax Foundation property taxes[3], BEA Regional Price Parities[4].

What Changes Your Result in Ohio

  • Ohio cost-of-living drag:Line-item costs in Ohio deviate from the US mean by whatever the BEA all-items RPP deviates from 100. Weight your budget toward the state average rather than the national average.

Related Calculations for Ohio

These calculators share inputs with the cost of living comparison formula, so pair them to pressure-test your answer from multiple angles.

  • Ohio's inflation impact rules — inflation erodes COL gaps over time.
State Index · Cost of living

How does Ohio compare to the other 49?

Sourced from primary government data. All 50 states ranked, click any state for the breakdown.

See Ohio vs all 50 states→

How Ohio Compares

MetricOhioNational AvgINKYMI
Median Home Price$225,000$420,000$265,000$265,000$305,000
Property Tax Rate1.56%1.07%0.85%0.85%1.56%
State Income Tax3.5%4.6%*3.23%5%4.25%
Avg Insurance Cost$1,010/yr$1,544/yr$1,320/yr$1,440/yr$1,440/yr
Cost of Living Index91.9100908895
Household Income — p25$40,275$41,401$40,488$31,035$40,138
Household Income — p50 (median)$80,022$83,592$76,200$64,553$79,751
Household Income — p75$143,857$153,000$135,377$122,016$140,940

*Average of states that levy an income tax. 2026 estimates. Ohio has no tax on the first $26,050 of income — effectively zero state tax for many residents.[3] Income percentiles from DQYDJ/Census CPS 2024[4].

Ohio Cost of Living Tips

Tip

Ohio's COL index of 89 makes it one of the most affordable states — housing is the primary advantage.

Tip

Columbus and Cincinnati metros are slightly above the state average (~93-97).

Frequently Asked Questions: Cost of Living Comparison in Ohio

How does the cost of living comparison work in Ohio?
The cost of living comparison runs the standard client-side formula and layers on Ohio's 3.5% state income tax, 1.56% property tax rate, and cost-of-living index of 91.9. All inputs stay in your browser.
What is Ohio's top marginal income tax rate?
Ohio's top marginal state income tax rate is 0.04%.
Does Ohio tax Social Security or retirement income?
Ohio exempts Social Security and taxes pensions/401(k)/IRA at standard rates.
What's the combined sales tax rate in Ohio?
Ohio's combined sales tax is 7.23% (rank #20 nationally).
Does Ohio have an estate or inheritance tax?
Ohio levies no state estate tax and no inheritance tax.
Does Ohio have state income tax?
Ohio has no tax on income under $26,050. Above that, rates are modest (recently moving toward a flat ~3.5%). Social Security is exempt.
Are there city income taxes in Ohio?
Yes — many Ohio cities levy their own income taxes. Cleveland and Columbus both charge about 2.5%, which can significantly affect take-home pay.
Is the cost of living comparison free to use for Ohio residents?
Yes — the Cost of Living Comparison is 100% free, with no signup required. All Ohio-specific numbers (median home price $225,000, property tax 1.56%, 3.5% state income tax) are prefilled from public datasets. Calculations run in your browser; no data is sent to our servers.
Where does the Ohio data on this page come from?
Data is sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), the Tax Foundation, BLS OEWS wage tables, Zillow ZHVI for home values, and Freddie Mac PMMS for mortgage rates. Each number is timestamped and refreshed via our hourly ETL.
How often is the Ohio cost of living comparison updated?
Source data is re-pulled on an hourly cadence for live series (mortgage rates) and on each new vintage release for ACS / Tax Foundation tables. Page caches revalidate every 24 hours via Next.js ISR.
Can I export results from the Ohio cost of living comparison?
Yes — every calculator supports CSV / PDF export from the result panel. No account required. Saves stay in your browser; nothing is uploaded.
Does the cost of living comparison replace tax or financial advice?
No. The Cost of Living Comparison provides educational estimates using public data and standard formulas. It is not personalized tax, legal, or investment advice. For decisions with material consequences, consult a licensed professional.

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Cost of Living Comparison for IndianaCost of Living Comparison for KentuckyCost of Living Comparison for MichiganCost of Living Comparison for Pennsylvania

Cost of Living Comparison by State

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Ohio Financial Data (2026)

State Income Tax
3.5%
Property Tax Rate
1.56%
Median Home Price
$225,000
Annual Property Tax (median home)
$3,510
Avg Homeowners Insurance
$1,010/year
Cost of Living Index
91.9 (100 = avg)
State Estate Tax
No
State Abbreviation
OH

Compare Ohio with other states

Every number on this page reads from the same CalcFi data repository used by the Live Data pages below — the figures stay consistent.

Home Prices by State

Zillow ZHVI across all 50 states

Property Tax by State

Effective rate × ZHVI = annual bill

Household Income by State

FRED real median + percentile bands

Cost of Living by State

BEA RPP all-items + housing

No-Income-Tax States

Full list + trade-offs

Current Interest Rates

Treasury curve + PMMS + FDIC

How we compute this — methodology

CalcFi pSEO pages combine three inputs: (1) the calculator formula itself, which runs client-side so no inputs leave your browser; (2) state-level financial constants from primary public datasets; and (3) national benchmarks for comparison. The Ohio page uses the property tax rate (1.56%), median home price ($225,000), and 3.5% state income tax from the sources listed below.

Refresh cadence:state tax brackets and minimum wage rates are reviewed annually after each state's legislative session. Property tax, median home price, insurance, and cost-of-living figures are reviewed annually against the primary sources. Income percentiles are refreshed when the Census CPS/IPUMS releases update (typically September). Page-level dateModified matches the last editorial review date, shown above.

Known limits: statewide averages mask large intra-state variance — county-level property tax and metro-level home prices differ significantly from the figures shown. For the most precise calculations, cross-check the output against your actual county assessor and the latest federal/state tax tables at filing time.

More Cities in Ohio

Use Cost of Living Comparison for any city in Ohio.

Columbus2.1M metroCleveland2.0M metroCincinnati2.3M metroDayton820K metroAkron700K metroToledo620K metroYoungstown535K metroCanton400K metro

Related Calculators & States

Same Calculator, Other States

  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota

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National reference: Cost Of Living Comparison Calculator

Sources

Every number on this page cites a primary public dataset. Last reviewed 2026-05-21 (auto-bumped by the next ISR refresh after an ETL run).

  1. U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division — State Minimum Wage Laws. dol.gov/agencies/whd/minimum-wage/state. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  2. Tax Foundation — State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets. taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/state-income-tax-rates-2025. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  3. Composite state financial context (median home price, property tax effective rate, cost of living index) cross-referenced against the primary sources below.
  4. Census Current Population Survey / IPUMS CPS (income year 2024) via DQYDJ state tools. dqydj.com. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  5. Bureau of Economic Analysis — Regional Price Parities by State — www.bea.gov/data/prices-inflation/regional-price-parities-state-and-metro-area. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  6. HUD Fair Market Rents — 50th-percentile 2-bedroom FY — www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/fmr.html. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  7. U.S. Census Bureau — American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates — www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  8. U.S. Energy Information Administration — residential electricity / natural gas / gasoline — www.eia.gov. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  9. BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) — state-level occupational wages — www.bls.gov/oes. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  10. Zillow Research — ZHVI (Zillow Home Value Index) + ZORI (Zillow Observed Rent Index) — www.zillow.com/research/data. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  11. Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) — weekly national mortgage rates — www.freddiemac.com/pmms. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  12. Tax Foundation — Property Taxes Paid as % of Owner-Occupied Housing Value; State Tax Rates and Brackets; Estate/Inheritance; Social Security Taxation — taxfoundation.org/data/all/state. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  13. NAIC Dwelling Fire, Homeowners Owners, and Homeowners Tenants Insurance Report — content.naic.org/article/homeowners-insurance-report. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  14. State Departments of Revenue — official bracket + deduction publications (one primary URL per state; linked in the brackets table below) — taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/state-income-tax-rates. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  15. U.S. Department of Labor — State Minimum Wage Laws — www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/minimum-wage/state. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  16. FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) — real median household income, unemployment, HPI, LFPR per state — fred.stlouisfed.org. Retrieved 2026-05-21.

CalcFi does not sell data. If you spot an error, email hello@calcfi.app with the URL and the correct figure.

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HomeCareer & SalaryCost of Living Calculator — Compare Cities Side by Side

Cost of Living Calculator — Compare Cities Side by Side

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Assumptions· 2026

  • ·C2ER composite index applied across housing, food, utilities, transportation, healthcare, misc
  • ·Equivalent salary shown: income needed in target city to maintain same purchasing power
  • ·Housing carries highest weight in composite (typically 25–35%)
  • ·Monthly budget breakdown by category for each city shown side-by-side
When this is wrong
  • ·Tax burden difference: TX/FL to CA/NY can cost 5–10% of gross income in additional taxes
  • ·Index lag: published data may reflect prior-year rents in fast-moving markets
  • ·Lifestyle variance: high dining/entertainment spenders see different COL differential
  • ·Employer pay practices: some remote employers adjust salary for COL, others pay flat national rate
Assumptions· 2026▾
  • ·C2ER composite index applied across housing, food, utilities, transportation, healthcare, misc
  • ·Equivalent salary shown: income needed in target city to maintain same purchasing power
  • ·Housing carries highest weight in composite (typically 25–35%)
  • ·Monthly budget breakdown by category for each city shown side-by-side
When this is wrong
  • ·Tax burden difference: TX/FL to CA/NY can cost 5–10% of gross income in additional taxes
  • ·Index lag: published data may reflect prior-year rents in fast-moving markets
  • ·Lifestyle variance: high dining/entertainment spenders see different COL differential
  • ·Employer pay practices: some remote employers adjust salary for COL, others pay flat national rate

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Your Results

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Demo numbers · replace inputs to see yours
Equivalent Salary in Denver
$101,682positivepositive trend

+19.6% more expensive

HouseholdSingle
Current Salary (Houston)$85,000
Equivalent Salary (Denver)$101,682
Salary Difference+$16,682/year
Houston COL Index107
Denver COL Index128

Category Breakdown

CategoryHoustonDenverDifference
Housing102163+59.8%
Food96104+8.3%
Transportation102105+2.9%
Healthcare100106+6%
Utilities10592-12.4%

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Deep-dive articles

⚡ Key Takeaways

  • New York, San Francisco, and Honolulu are consistently the most expensive US cities (70-90% above average)
  • Memphis, Oklahoma City, and El Paso are among the cheapest (10-15% below average)
  • Housing is the #1 cost differentiator — it varies 4x between cheapest and most expensive cities
  • A $100K salary in San Francisco has the purchasing power of ~$53K in the national average
  • Remote work has created arbitrage opportunities: earn SF salary, live in Nashville

The Most Expensive Cities

New York City consistently tops the list with a cost of living index around 187 (87% above national average). The primary driver is housing: median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan is $3,500-$4,200/month, compared to the national median of $1,200-$1,400. A one-bedroom in Brooklyn or Queens runs $2,200-$2,800. Even outer boroughs are expensive by national standards.

San Francisco follows closely at around 179. Despite tech industry layoffs in 2023-2024, housing prices have remained stubbornly high. A one-bedroom apartment averages $2,800-$3,500/month. The Bay Area's limited housing supply (thanks to geography and restrictive zoning) keeps prices elevated regardless of economic cycles. Food and transportation are also 15-20% above average.

Honolulu presents a unique case at 170. Nearly everything is imported to Hawaii, driving food costs 30%+ above average. Utilities are the highest in the nation at 60%+ above average due to oil-dependent electricity generation. Housing costs reflect limited land on an island. The median home price exceeds $800,000.

Boston, Washington DC, and Seattle round out the top tier at 149-152. These cities combine expensive housing markets with higher-than-average costs across all categories. Government employment (DC), tech (Seattle), and education/healthcare (Boston) drive high wages that support high prices — a self-reinforcing cycle.

The Cheapest Major Cities

Memphis, Tennessee has a cost of living index around 89 — 11% below national average. Housing is the standout: median rent for a one-bedroom is $750-$900/month, and median home prices are around $200,000. Food, transportation, and healthcare are all 3-5% below average. The trade-off: lower average wages, fewer job opportunities in certain fields, and quality-of-life factors that vary by neighborhood.

Oklahoma City (90), El Paso (88), and Little Rock (88) offer similar affordability. These cities share common traits: lower wages (offsetting some of the savings), abundance of land (keeping housing affordable), lower state and local taxes, and fewer"premium" amenities that drive up costs in coastal cities.

The Midwest and South generally offer the best cost-of-living ratios. Cities like Indianapolis (95), Kansas City (97), and St. Louis (94) provide genuine urban amenities — restaurants, culture, professional sports, airports — at costs well below the coasts. For remote workers, these cities represent significant purchasing power gains.

The Remote Work Arbitrage

Remote work has created an unprecedented opportunity: earn a salary calibrated to an expensive city while living in an affordable one. A software engineer earning $180,000 in San Francisco (where that salary provides a modest lifestyle) can live like royalty in Nashville, where the same income goes 30% further.

Some companies have adjusted for this by implementing location-based pay (reducing salaries when employees relocate to cheaper areas). But many haven't, and even with a 10-15% pay cut, the math often favors relocation. $153,000 in Nashville ($180K minus 15%) buys more than $180,000 in San Francisco. The key: negotiate remote work with a company based in an expensive market, then choose where you live based on lifestyle and cost.

⚡ Key Takeaways

  • A $75,000 salary in Houston has the same purchasing power as $131,000 in New York City
  • Housing consumes 25-50% of income depending on location — it's the biggest variable
  • State income tax adds 0-13% to cost differences (Texas/Florida have no state income tax)
  • "Real salary" = nominal salary adjusted for local cost of living and taxes
  • Always negotiate salary based on the market where you'll work/live, not just the job title

Understanding Purchasing Power

Your salary number means nothing without context. $80,000 in San Francisco leaves you with less disposable income than $55,000 in Memphis. This is because every dollar buys different amounts of housing, food, transportation, and services depending on where you live.

Purchasing power parity (PPP) — a concept usually applied to international economics — works within the US too. The Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks Regional Price Parities (RPPs) that measure price differences across metro areas. The range is dramatic: the most expensive metro (Urban Honolulu) has an RPP of 124.5, while the cheapest major metros hover around 85-88. That's a 40%+ difference in what a dollar buys.

The formula is straightforward: Real Salary = Nominal Salary × (Target City Index / Current City Index). If you earn $100,000 in Houston (index 107) and move to New York (index 187), you'd need: $100,000 × (187/107) = $174,766 to maintain the same standard of living. That $75K raise to $175K isn't really a raise — it's just keeping pace with costs.

Housing: The Dominant Variable

Housing is where cost-of-living differences concentrate most dramatically. While food might vary 10-30% between cities, and transportation 5-20%, housing varies by 300-400%. Median monthly housing costs: Memphis: $750-$900/month (1BR rent). Houston: $1,100-$1,300. Denver: $1,500-$1,800. Boston: $2,200-$2,800. San Francisco: $2,800-$3,500. New York (Manhattan): $3,500-$4,200.

This means housing takes 20-25% of gross income in affordable cities but 40-50% in expensive ones (at median salaries). The standard financial advice of"spend no more than 30% on housing" is mathematically impossible for median earners in several major cities.

The Tax Factor

State and local income taxes add another layer. Seven states have no income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. California taxes up to 13.3%, New York up to 10.9% (plus NYC's additional 3.9%). Moving from California to Texas saves a $150,000 earner roughly $10,000-$15,000/year in state income tax alone.

Property taxes vary too: New Jersey averages 2.23% of home value while Hawaii averages 0.28%. On a $400,000 home, that's $8,920/year in New Jersey vs. $1,120 in Hawaii. Sales taxes range from 0% (Oregon, Montana) to 9%+ (Tennessee, combined state + local).

A complete comparison must include: cost of goods and services (captured by COL index), state income tax rate, property tax rate (if buying), sales tax rate, and any local/city taxes. Use our calculator to compare the goods/services component, then factor in tax differences for the complete picture.

Cost of living indices compare prices for housing, food, transportation, healthcare, and utilities across cities. The national average is set at 100. A city with an index of 130 is 30% more expensive than average.

New York City consistently has the highest cost of living among major US cities, at roughly 87% above the national average. San Francisco, Honolulu, and Boston follow closely.

If you earn $75,000 in Houston (index 107), you'd need approximately $131,000 in New York City (index 187) to maintain the same standard of living — a 75% increase.

Standard cost of living indices typically cover goods and services (housing, food, transport) but NOT state/local income taxes. Factor in tax differences separately for a complete comparison.

Among cities with 500K+ population, Memphis, TN and Oklahoma City, OK are consistently the cheapest, with costs 10-15% below the national average.

Multiply your current salary by the ratio of the new city index to your current city index. For example, earning $80,000 in a city with index 95 and moving to index 150 means you need approximately $126,000 to maintain the same purchasing power.

Housing is the dominant factor, accounting for 30 to 40 percent of cost-of-living differences between cities. A city with a median home price of $500,000 versus $200,000 will have dramatically different overall cost indices regardless of other expenses.

Remote workers earning big-city salaries while living in affordable areas gain significant purchasing power. Moving from San Francisco to Austin on a $150,000 salary effectively gives you a 30 to 40 percent raise in real spending power.

Purchasing power parity measures how much your income can actually buy in a given location. A $60,000 salary in Oklahoma City buys more than $100,000 in San Francisco when adjusted for housing, food, transportation, and healthcare costs.

States without income tax like Texas, Florida, and Nevada provide an immediate advantage. A $100,000 earner moving from California to Texas saves roughly $6,000 to $9,000 annually in state income taxes alone, significantly impacting effective cost of living.

Equivalent Salary = Current Salary × (Target City Index / Current City Index)

Indices are based on BLS Regional Price Parities and C2ER composite data. National average = 100.

Published byJere Salmisto· Founder, CalcFiReviewed byCalcFi EditorialEditorial standardsMethodologyLast updated June 4, 2026

Primary sources & authoritative references

Every formula on this page traces to a federal agency, central bank, or peer-reviewed institution. We cite the rule-makers, not secondhand blogs.

  • BLS — Regional and State Consumer Price Indexes — U.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsRegional CPI series used to compare living costs across metros. (opens in new tab)
  • U.S. Census Bureau — Income and earnings by metro area — U.S. Census BureauIncome data paired with cost data for real purchasing power calc. (opens in new tab)
  • FRED — CPI All Urban Consumers for cost-of-living baseline — Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (opens in new tab)

Found an error in a formula or source? Report it →

Origin City
Austin, TX
Destination
San Francisco, CA
Origin Salary
$100,000
BEA RPP
Austin 99 / SF 118

Result: Need ~$170,000 in SF to maintain Austin lifestyle (70% raise required)

BEA Regional Price Parity 2022: Austin 99.1, SF 118.3. Housing differential is extreme: Zillow ZHVI Austin $545k vs SF $1.25M; ZORI rent Austin $1,850 vs SF $3,400. Tax: TX 0% state income vs CA 9.3% marginal at $100k+. Net take-home drops further after state tax — practical equivalent closer to $185k needed.

Origin
SF, CA
Destination
Austin, TX
Origin Salary
$150,000

Result: Need only ~$105,000 in Austin for equivalent lifestyle

Reverse move: $45k/year savings potential. Add zero state income tax (saves ~$9,500/yr on $150k) and you're effectively keeping more despite nominal pay cut. This is the classic 'geoarb' play that drove 2020–2022 Bay Area → Texas tech migration per LinkedIn Workforce Reports.

Origin
Chicago, IL (RPP 103)
Destination
New York, NY (RPP 125)
Income
$180,000 HH

Result: Need ~$218,000 in NYC — 21% raise required, BEFORE accounting for childcare/schools

Private school in NYC can add $45–60k/child/year per ISAAGNY data. Childcare differential: Chicago ~$1,900/mo vs NYC $2,800/mo per Care.com. Add those and NYC requirement jumps to ~$260k+ for equivalent real-world lifestyle.

Origin
Seattle, WA
Destination
Boise, ID
Salary
$140k (stays same remotely)

Result: Effective 22% raise from moving — same paycheck, lower costs

BEA RPP: Seattle 115, Boise 94. Housing: ZHVI Seattle $870k vs Boise $485k. Both zero state income tax on W-2 (WA) or modest 5.8% (ID) vs WA capital gains tax. Remote work trend enables this arbitrage for location-independent workers.

State income tax can swing $5–20k/yr at middle-income levels. TX, FL, NV, WA, TN, NH (mostly) have 0% income tax vs CA 9.3–13.3% marginal.

Impact: $150k earner moving CA → TX saves ~$11,000/yr in state tax alone — a factor the basic COL index doesn't capture.

Childcare can be $1,500–3,500/month per child per Care.com 2024 data. Private K-12 ranges $20k (Midwest) to $60k (NYC) per ISAAGNY. Factor these explicitly.

Impact: A family of 4 moving to a high-COL city can underestimate true cost by $30–80k/year when childcare and schools are overlooked.

Use HUD Fair Market Rent, Zillow ZORI, and mortgage payment at current rates. A $600k vs $1.2M home is not '2x' — it's often 2.2–2.5x monthly due to property tax and insurance scaling.

Impact: Underestimating monthly housing by $1,500/month = $18,000/year off budget. Classic source of post-move financial stress.

BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey shows transport costs vary $8k–$20k/yr depending on metro transit quality. Account for 2-car vs 1-car vs no-car lifestyle.

Impact: A move from NYC (no car, $1,500/yr MTA) to suburban TX (2 cars, $12k/yr) creates a $10k+ hidden cost line.

Cost of Living Calculator — Compare Cities Side by Side by State

State-specific rates, taxes, and cost-of-living adjustments

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Calculations are for educational purposes only. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized advice.