For the full framework and comparison workflow, use the Cost of Living hub.

The Core Question: Does Your Income Travel With You?

Moving for lower COL is financially most powerful when your salary stays the same or close to it. Remote workers with location-independent compensation get the clearest benefit. Everyone else needs to check what the role actually pays locally before assuming the COL savings are real.

Two very different scenarios:

Scenario Income Impact COL Impact Likely Winner
Remote worker, no salary change Same income Lower expenses Clear financial gain
Job changer, must find local work Lower salary Lower expenses Often a wash; calculate carefully

Step 1: Calculate Your Real COL Difference

Cost-of-living comparison tools (NerdWallet, Bankrate, and Numbeo provide free calculators) give you a starting estimate. For a more accurate picture, price out the specific expenses that matter most in your household:

  • Housing: Look up actual rents or home prices for equivalent accommodations
  • State income tax: Compare your current effective state rate vs. destination rate
  • Property tax: Matters if you plan to buy; Texas has some of the highest rates in the country despite no income tax
  • Commuting costs: A car-required suburb vs. a walkable city changes transportation spend significantly
  • Childcare: Varies widely by state and city
  • Groceries and services: Typically a smaller gap than housing but still meaningful

Example: San Francisco to Austin (Remote Worker, $120K Salary)

Category San Francisco Austin Monthly Savings
1BR apartment $3,400 $1,600 $1,800
State income tax (monthly) ~$830 $0 $830
Car insurance $280 $180 $100
Groceries $700 $550 $150
Total ~$2,880/month

That is roughly $34,000/year in additional financial capacity — without a raise.


Step 2: Check What Your Role Pays Locally

If you are not a remote worker, research actual job postings in the destination market. Tools like LinkedIn Salary, Glassdoor, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics show city-level compensation data.

Common salary compression factors:

  • Software engineers often see 15–25% lower base salaries outside major tech hubs
  • Finance and legal roles are often deeply tied to their primary markets
  • Healthcare, education, and trades tend to have better geographic parity
  • Sales roles tied to territory will follow local market standards

Rule of thumb: If the salary in your destination market is 20%+ lower than your current salary, make sure the COL difference covers the gap — do not assume it automatically does.


Step 3: Account for One-Time Moving Costs

Moving costs should be spread across the number of years you expect to stay in the new location.

Move Type Estimated Cost
Local/regional (same state) $1,500–$3,500
Cross-regional (500–1,500 miles) $3,000–$6,000
Cross-country $5,000–$10,000+

If your monthly savings are $1,500 and moving costs $6,000, the move breaks even in 4 months. If you plan to stay 5+ years, that is a minor factor.


Step 4: The Non-Financial Factors (Which Are Real)

The financial calculation is important but incomplete:

  • Career network: High-cost cities often have denser professional networks for advancement, especially in finance, media, tech, and law
  • Family proximity: Moving closer to family may reduce childcare costs and provide support
  • Quality of life alignment: Climate, outdoor access, urban vs. suburban density preferences genuinely affect spending and satisfaction
  • Reversibility: Moving back is expensive and disruptive — treat the first move as a trial if possible

When Moving for COL Usually Makes Sense

  • You are a remote worker keeping your current salary
  • You are in a career with strong geographic parity (healthcare, trades, education)
  • You are near or in retirement and income is from investment/Social Security rather than employment
  • You are moving toward family who will meaningfully reduce your childcare or elder care costs
  • Housing in your current city has made homeownership unachievable at your income

When to Think Twice

  • Your career is highly localized to a specific metro (finance in NYC, film in LA)
  • You would need to take a significant salary cut to find equivalent local work
  • You have deep professional and personal networks in your current city
  • You are early in your career when network effects and visibility to senior mentors matter most

Related: Is It Better to Rent or Buy? · How Much House Can I Really Afford? · 100K Salary After Taxes by State

Sources

  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Consumer Expenditure Surveys.” bls.gov/cex
  • Social Security Administration. “Benefits and Eligibility Information.” ssa.gov/benefits

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy