Cost of Living Calculator — Compare Cities & Salaries

Compare cost of living between cities and calculate the equivalent salary needed to maintain your lifestyle. Includes housing, groceries, transport, and state tax adjustments.

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Equivalent Salary Needed
Salary Difference
Cost Difference %
Monthly Impact
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
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Required Salary to Match
Offered vs Required
Real Purchasing Power Change
Is the Offer Worth It?
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
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Required Salary (same lifestyle)
COL-Adjusted Salary
Annual Tax Savings from Move
Monthly Housing Cost Change
Monthly Groceries Cost Change
New Annual Savings Capacity
Quality of Life Score (vs 100)

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your Current Salary and set your current city cost index (use 100 as baseline).
  2. Enter the Target City Cost Index relative to your current city.
  3. The calculator shows the equivalent salary needed in the target city.
  4. Use the Salary Comparison tab to evaluate a specific job offer.
  5. Use the Remote Worker tab to see your purchasing power gain from moving to a cheaper city.

Formula

Equivalent Salary = Current Salary × (Target Index ÷ Current Index)
Purchasing Power Gain = Current Salary − Equivalent Salary at New City
Equivalent Raise % = Purchasing Power Gain ÷ Equivalent Salary × 100

Example

Example: You earn $80,000 in a city with index 100. A job offer in a city with index 130 pays $95,000. Required salary = $80,000 × 1.30 = $104,000. The $95,000 offer is $9,000 short — your lifestyle would cost more than you earn.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Equivalent Salary = Current Salary × (Target City Index ÷ Current City Index). If your current city is 100 and the target city is 130, you need 30% more salary to maintain the same lifestyle.
  • An index of 100 is the baseline (usually the national average). A city with index 150 is 50% more expensive than baseline. Cities like San Francisco (180+) and New York (190+) are well above average.
  • Compare the offered salary against the required equivalent salary. If the offer exceeds the required amount, you will have more purchasing power. Use the Salary Comparison tab to evaluate.
  • Remote workers who keep their current salary while moving to a cheaper city effectively get a pay raise. Moving from NYC (index 190) to Austin (index 118) on the same salary is equivalent to a 61% raise in purchasing power.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Consumer Price Index (CPI) — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
  2. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Consumer Expenditure Survey — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
  3. Bureau of Economic Analysis — Regional Economic Accounts — Bureau of Economic Analysis
  4. Census Bureau — Income and Cost of Living Data — U.S. Census Bureau
  5. Federal Reserve — Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households — Federal Reserve