Calculator · Cost of living

Compare cost of living across U.S. cities.

Click any city on the map. Pick another. See what your salary needs to be in the new city to keep the same lifestyle — with the math in front of you.

Step 1
Where do you live?
or

U.S. metros

Click any dot to compare against your home city. Click anywhere — we'll snap to the nearest metro.
Pacific NW West Coast Mountain Texas Midwest South Florida Northeast
Below 95 (cheaper than U.S. average) 95–115 (near average) Above 115 (more expensive) U.S. average = 100
Pick your city above to get started.
Cost-of-living index: 100
$
Equivalent in the new city

How this works

Each city's cost-of-living index is a composite measure of housing, groceries, transportation, utilities, healthcare, and miscellaneous expenses, scaled so that the U.S. national average equals 100. A city with an index of 130 means everyday life there costs about 30% more than the national average; a city at 85 costs about 15% less.

The math is straightforward — to keep the same lifestyle, your income should scale with the cost-of-living ratio between the two cities:

Equivalent income = your income × (target city index ÷ current city index)

So a $100,000 salary in San Francisco (index ~180) is equivalent to about $50,000 in Cleveland (index ~88), because Cleveland is roughly half the cost of San Francisco. Same lifestyle, very different number.

About the data: the indices used here are approximations drawn from publicly available sources, including U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics metro-area consumer price data, BestPlaces-style cost-of-living aggregations, and Numbeo's crowdsourced indices. They are rounded for clarity and current to recent years, not to a single specific date.

A composite single-number index is also a blunt instrument. Housing is the dominant driver in most expensive cities — if you rent in San Francisco the gap feels enormous; if you already own a paid-off home, far smaller. Taxes (state income, local sales) are not fully captured. Lifestyle assumptions matter: someone who walks and uses transit in NYC may live very differently from a car-dependent suburban household at the same headline index. For real relocation decisions, treat this calculator as a starting orientation, then dig into the specific line items that drive your budget.