Relocation Salary
Calculator 2026
How much salary do you need in your new city? Compare equivalent salary, after-tax take-home, and cost of living across 90+ US and Canadian cities. Negotiate a COLA or relocation package with data.
Coverage
90+ US & Canada cities
Includes
Full federal + state taxes
Optional
Rent, mortgage & commute
Price
100% free, no sign-up
Popular relocation routes
Refine your comparison
Add housing, commute, and lifestyle details for a more accurate picture. Changes apply when you click Compare again.
We’ll show avg rent in both cities and % of income on housing.
We use state avg gas, maintenance (wear) and insurance.
Adjust to your habits to see how much more or less your lifestyle would cost in the new city.
Low → Medium → High
Budget → Average → Organic
Rare → Moderate → Frequent
We’ll estimate moving truck/movers, security deposit difference (if renting), utility setup, and travel. Add furniture if you expect to replace or outfit the new place.
Security deposit uses your housing type above when renting. Moving and travel costs depend on whether you’re staying in the same state/province or moving long distance.
Optional. Compare employer plan vs marketplace (ACA) costs. Useful if self-employed or switching employers.
Your salary
We’ll compare take-home pay and the equivalent salary you’d need in the new city.
How it works
Equiv. salary = current × (COL new / COL current)
Federal + state/provincial tax applied for both cities
Optional: add rent, mortgage, or commute costs
Top states: purchasing power
Index 100 = national avg. Higher = dollar goes further.
Disclaimer: All results are estimates only and not legal, tax, or financial advice.
Cost of living, rent, taxes, and commute figures vary by neighborhood, household, and over time. Use this tool for planning and comparison only; verify numbers with official sources or a professional before making relocation or salary decisions.
How the relocation salary comparison works
This tool uses cost-of-living indices (100 = national average) for each city. It finds the equivalent gross salary in the new city so your purchasing power stays the same, then runs full tax calculations so you see after-tax take-home in both places.
Equiv. = Current × (COL New / COL Current). The gross pay in the new city that keeps your real spending power the same.
How much more (or less) gross income you'd need in the new city relative to today.
Your actual monthly pocket money in each city after federal, state, FICA, and local taxes.
Below is the same math the calculator uses for equivalent gross salary from cost-of-living indices. Actual take-home also depends on federal, state or provincial, payroll, and local taxes—run the calculator for your filing status and salary.
Example 1 — US: equivalent gross from COL indices
You earn $100,000 gross in San Francisco (COL index 165) and consider Austin, TX (COL index 98). Indices are relative to the US average (100).
equivalent gross = current gross × (COLnew ÷ COLcurrent)
= $100,000 × (98 ÷ 165) = $100,000 × 0.5939… ≈ $59,394
Percent change vs your current gross: (($59,394 − $100,000) ÷ $100,000) × 100 ≈ −41%. That is how much lower your gross could be in Austin if spending tracked the index perfectly—then Texas and California taxes are applied separately, which is why you should always check after-tax take-home in the results.
See a full city pair write-up: San Francisco → Austin comparison.
Example 2 — “Reverse” move (cheaper → pricier city)
You earn $80,000 in Austin (COL 98) and want to know the rough equivalent gross in San Francisco (COL 165).
$80,000 × (165 ÷ 98) = $80,000 × 1.684… ≈ $134,694
You would need a much higher gross in SF to match the same modeled basket—again, use the calculator to see take-home after California and federal taxes.
Example 3 — Canada: Toronto to Calgary
You make $100,000 CAD in Toronto (COL 118) and compare Calgary (COL 92). Both indices are relative to the Canadian average (100).
$100,000 × (92 ÷ 118) ≈ $77,966 CAD equivalent gross
Provincial tax and CPP/EI still apply on that gross in Alberta vs Ontario—the tool computes those when you select cities and filing status.
Example 4 — Effective tax + payroll “burden” (illustrative)
The calculator shows an approximate combined burden for planning: income tax plus payroll (Social Security and Medicare in the US; CPP and EI in Canada), as a share of gross:
effective burden % ≈ ((gross − take-home) ÷ gross) × 100
Example: if annual gross is $100,000 and estimated take-home is $72,000, burden ≈ (($100,000 − $72,000) ÷ $100,000) × 100 = 28%. Your actual result depends on city, state or province, and filing status.
Example 5 — Rent as a percent of gross income
In the optional Housing section, rent as % of income uses your annual gross (or equivalent gross where labeled):
rent % of gross = (monthly rent × 12) ÷ annual gross × 100
Example: $2,400/month rent and $120,000 gross → ($2,400 × 12) ÷ $120,000 × 100 = 24%.
For the full technical breakdown (take-home rows, purchasing power, housing benchmarks), see How we calculate these numbers. For COL, tax, and salary vocabulary, see Terms & definitions.
Quick reference for words and acronyms you will see in this calculator and in relocation discussions.
- COL (cost of living)
- Shorthand for how expensive it is to live somewhere—housing, food, transportation, and other typical expenses. This calculator uses a cost-of-living index per city, not your personal budget.
- Cost-of-living index
- A relative score where 100 means “national average” for that country (US or Canada). Above 100 = more expensive than average; below 100 = cheaper. It lets us compare cities on one scale.
- Equivalent salary (equivalent gross)
- The gross annual salary you would need in the destination city so that, after applying that city’s cost-of-living scale, your spending power matches your current city—before re-running taxes. Computed as: current gross × (COLnew ÷ COLcurrent).
- COLA (cost of living adjustment)
- A pay change employers sometimes offer so your income keeps pace with higher or lower costs in a new location. The equivalent salary from this tool is a common benchmark when asking for a COLA.
- Purchasing power
- The idea of what your money can actually buy after prices in an area. Two cities with different COL indices can make the same dollar salary “feel” larger or smaller in real life.
- Gross vs take-home (net)
- Gross is salary before taxes. Take-home (or net) is what remains after income taxes and required payroll contributions—what hits your bank account annually in our results.
- Federal income tax
- Tax owed to the IRS on taxable income. Rates are progressive (higher income can face higher marginal rates). The calculator applies federal rules for the year modeled in the tool.
- State income tax
- Tax owed to your state of residence on income. Rates and rules vary; some states have no state income tax (for example Texas or Florida), which can change take-home a lot at the same gross.
- FICA / payroll taxes (US)
- Required withholdings on wages: Social Security and Medicare (together often called FICA). They reduce take-home in addition to federal and state income tax.
- Marginal vs effective tax rate
- Your marginal rate is the tax on the next dollar of income (by bracket). Your effective rate is total tax divided by gross—often lower because of brackets, deductions, and credits. Our “burden” line in tables is closer to an effective total of income + payroll taxes on that salary.
- Standard deduction
- A dollar amount that reduces taxable income if you do not itemize deductions. Filing status (single, married, etc.) changes the standard deduction and brackets.
- Filing status
- Your tax category—e.g. single, married filing jointly, head of household. It affects deductions, brackets, and how much tax you owe from the same gross.
- Local or city income tax
- Extra wage or income tax in some cities (for example New York City or Philadelphia). Where our model includes them, they reduce take-home on top of federal and state taxes.
- Federal income tax (Canada)
- Tax owed to the Government of Canada on taxable income, with progressive federal brackets and a basic personal amount.
- Provincial or territorial tax
- Income tax for your province or territory (for example Ontario or Alberta). Rates and brackets differ by jurisdiction and are stacked on top of federal tax.
- CPP (Canada Pension Plan)
- A required pension contribution on employment earnings within set limits. It reduces take-home like a payroll deduction and is separate from income tax.
- EI (Employment Insurance)
- A required premium on insurable earnings (up to an annual maximum) to fund Employment Insurance benefits.
- Estimate
- All figures are planning estimates. Real taxes depend on credits, deductions, other income, and updates to law; real COL depends on neighborhood and lifestyle.
- Same gross in the new city
- A row that answers: “If I keep my current salary but move, how much do I take home under the new state or province’s taxes?” Useful for remote workers or fixed offers.
- Take-home at equivalent gross
- A row that answers: “If I earn the COL-adjusted equivalent salary in the destination, what is my take-home there?”—so you can compare lifestyle after both COL and taxes.
How to use the relocation salary calculator
Select from 90+ US and Canadian cities. Use the quick-links above for common routes.
Your gross annual salary today. The tool computes equivalent salary in the new city.
Married/single/HOH — so after-tax numbers are accurate for both cities.
See rent or mortgage by city, commute costs, and % of income on housing.
What affects your equivalent salary when relocating?
Your equivalent salary in a new city depends on cost of living and taxes. Higher COL or higher taxes mean you need more gross pay to maintain the same lifestyle.
Housing, groceries, utilities vary by city. Index 120 = ~20% more expensive than national avg.
Income tax differs by state (US) and province (Canada). Moving to a no-tax state can raise take-home significantly.
NYC and Philadelphia add local income tax on top of state and federal — included in our calculations.
Rent and home prices drive most of the COL difference. Use the Housing Cost section for city-by-city rent and mortgage.
Gas, insurance, and transit costs vary by region. The Commute section shows monthly cost in each city.
Salary benchmarks differ by city. Use the calculator's occupation wage section to see median pay in each metro.
Taxes & deductions included in the calculator
Take-home pay depends on federal tax, state or provincial tax, and payroll deductions. Our calculator includes all of these so you compare real after-tax salary between cities.
US states with no income tax
| State | Notes |
|---|---|
| Alaska | No state income tax |
| Florida | Popular relocation target |
| Nevada | No state income tax |
| New Hampshire | Wages exempt; taxes interest/dividends |
| South Dakota | No state income tax |
| Tennessee | Wages exempt; taxes interest/dividends |
| Texas | Popular relocation target |
| Washington | No state income tax |
| Wyoming | No state income tax |
US payroll deductions (FICA)
| Deduction | Rate |
|---|---|
| Social Security | 6.2% Caps at $176,100 wage base (2026) |
| Medicare | 1.45% No cap |
| Add'l Medicare | +0.9% Wages over $200K (single) |
| Federal income tax | Progressive Brackets + std. deduction |
Canada payroll deductions
| Deduction | Rate |
|---|---|
| CPP (Canada Pension Plan) | 5.95% On earnings between exemption & max |
| EI (Employment Insurance) | 1.63% Caps at annual max |
| Federal income tax | Progressive Brackets + basic personal amount |
| Provincial/territorial tax | Varies AB, ON, BC, QC etc. |
City & local income taxes
| City | Local rate | Applies to |
|---|---|---|
| New York City | ~3.9% | NYC residents |
| Philadelphia | ~3.8% | Wage tax (residents) |
| Washington DC | — | DC taxes at state level (no separate city tax) |
State-by-state: median income, COL & purchasing power
Median household income (2024, Census ACS). COL: 100 = US average. Purchasing power: higher = dollar goes further. Sorted by purchasing power.
| State | Median income | COL index | Purchasing power |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oklahoma | $60k | 86 | 116 |
| Mississippi | $54k | 87 | 115 |
| West Virginia | $54k | 88 | 114 |
| Alabama | $61k | 89 | 112 |
| Kansas | $71k | 89 | 112 |
| Missouri | $68k | 89 | 112 |
| Arkansas | $57k | 90 | 111 |
| Iowa | $73k | 90 | 111 |
| Michigan | $71k | 90 | 111 |
| Tennessee | $67k | 90 | 111 |
| Indiana | $69k | 91 | 110 |
| North Dakota | $74k | 91 | 110 |
| Louisiana | $57k | 92 | 109 |
| South Dakota | $70k | 92 | 109 |
| Texas | $75k | 92 | 109 |
| Georgia | $74k | 93 | 108 |
| Kentucky | $61k | 93 | 108 |
| Nebraska | $74k | 93 | 108 |
| New Mexico | $57k | 94 | 106 |
| Ohio | $68k | 94 | 106 |
| Wyoming | $73k | 94 | 106 |
| Illinois | $78k | 95 | 105 |
| Minnesota | $87k | 95 | 105 |
| South Carolina | $65k | 95 | 105 |
| Montana | $69k | 96 | 104 |
| Pennsylvania | $73k | 97 | 103 |
| North Carolina | $69k | 98 | 102 |
| Wisconsin | $75k | 98 | 102 |
| Idaho | $71k | 100 | 100 |
| Nevada | $72k | 100 | 100 |
| Virginia | $89k | 101 | 99 |
| Delaware | $75k | 102 | 98 |
| Florida | $70k | 102 | 98 |
| Utah | $89k | 102 | 98 |
| Colorado | $90k | 103 | 97 |
| Arizona | $71k | 111 | 90 |
| New Hampshire | $93k | 111 | 90 |
| Rhode Island | $79k | 111 | 90 |
| Oregon | $78k | 112 | 89 |
| Connecticut | $87k | 113 | 88 |
| Maine | $71k | 113 | 88 |
| Vermont | $75k | 114 | 88 |
| Washington | $91k | 114 | 88 |
| Maryland | $97k | 115 | 87 |
| New Jersey | $99k | 115 | 87 |
| Alaska | $83k | 125 | 80 |
| New York | $82k | 125 | 80 |
| Massachusetts | $97k | 141 | 71 |
| California | $94k | 142 | 70 |
| Hawaii | $97k | 185 | 54 |
Cities & housing cost comparison
Compare cost of living by city across 90+ US and Canadian cities. The optional Housing Cost section shows average rent for studio, 1–3 BR apartments, and 2–4 BR houses, plus % of income on housing in each place.
Higher COL cities
| City | COL index |
|---|---|
| San Francisco, CA | 165 |
| San Jose, CA | 158 |
| New York, NY | 150 |
| Oakland, CA | 145 |
| Los Angeles, CA | 140 |
| Boston, MA | 135 |
| Toronto, ON | 118 |
Lower COL cities
| City | COL index |
|---|---|
| Houston, TX | 88 |
| San Antonio, TX | 88 |
| Detroit, MI | 88 |
| Pittsburgh, PA | 88 |
| Indianapolis, IN | 85 |
| Cleveland, OH | 82 |
| Calgary, AB | 92 |
Index 100 = national average. Index 120 = ~20% more expensive; 80 = ~20% cheaper. Use the calculator above for your exact comparison.
Relocation salary negotiation tips
Use this calculator to back up a cost of living adjustment (COLA) or relocation offer. Employers often use similar indices; showing your data makes the ask clear and data-driven.
The 'equivalent salary needed' is the gross that keeps your purchasing power the same — use it as a floor for negotiation.
A raise that disappears to taxes or higher rent isn't a real raise. Share the after-tax comparison so the real impact is clear.
Use the Housing section and one-time move cost estimates to justify a relocation package or signing bonus.
Use comparison pages like NYC → Austin or SF → Denver for shareable, linkable results your employer can verify.
Popular city comparisons
NYC COL 150 vs Austin 98 — you often need ~35% less gross salary in Austin, plus no state income tax.
Bay Area COL is 165 — Houston and Phoenix at 88–95 offer dramatically lower housing and no state income tax.
LA COL 140 vs Denver 108 — Denver offers lower housing with proximity to outdoor lifestyle.
Alberta has lower provincial taxes than Ontario; Vancouver is high-cost. Compare before choosing.
Data sources & references
Our estimates are informed by the following sources. We are not affiliated with these organizations; links are for reference only.
US: C2ER-style relative indices (national avg = 100). Canada: city indexes aligned with Statistics Canada and Numbeo benchmarks.
Approximate median rent and price-to-rent ratios informed by Zillow, Statista, CMHC (Canada), and Zumper rental benchmarks.
Gas prices and auto insurance by state/province from AAA and similar sources; transit pass estimates from typical agency pricing.
US: federal law, state income tax, FICA. Canada: federal + provincial/territorial + CPP/EI. Local taxes (NYC, Philadelphia) estimated from public rates.
Every result from the relocation calculator is computed consistently. Here is how we turn your inputs into equivalent salary, take-home, and housing lines.
Cost-of-living index
Each city has a relative index where 100 is that country’s national average. A value of 120 means the modeled basket is about 20% more expensive than average; 85 means about 15% cheaper. Indices come from the same city tables we use across the relocation tool.
Equivalent gross salary (“same lifestyle”)
We scale your gross by the ratio of destination to origin COL: equivalent gross = your gross × (COL_destination ÷ COL_origin). That answers: “What gross in the new city matches the same broad spending basket as my current city?”—before taxes are applied again in the new jurisdiction.
Percent change vs your current gross
change % = ((equivalent gross − your gross) ÷ your gross) × 100. Positive means you need a higher gross in the destination to match the COL gap; negative means a lower gross can suffice.
After-tax take-home
Take-home is annual gross minus income and payroll taxes for the filing status you select. We use the same calculateTax engine as our paycheck and state calculators, with tax rules for 2026, each city’s state or province, and payroll taxes (US: Social Security and Medicare; Canada: CPP and EI). Where we model them, local wage or city income taxes are included. We do not model every possible deduction (for example voluntary 401(k) or RRSP deferrals); treat take-home as a planning estimate.
- Take-home in your current city — taxes your gross as if you live in the origin metro.
- Take-home in the new city at the same gross — same gross income, but tax rules for the destination state or province (and locality if modeled).
- Take-home in the new city at the equivalent gross — taxes the COL-adjusted equivalent salary in the destination.
“Approx. combined tax + payroll burden” (preview tables)
Shown as an effective rate: ((gross − take-home) ÷ gross) × 100, rounded to one decimal. It summarizes income plus payroll taxes on that row’s gross; it is not a marginal bracket rate.
Purchasing power line (example snapshot)
After we compute take-home in the origin at the scenario gross and take-home in the destination at the equivalent gross, we express the relative change as a percent: how much higher or lower the destination take-home is versus the origin take-home at those two points. Small differences are normal because tax schedules are not a perfect mirror of the COL ratio.
Housing snapshot (rent and % of income)
When shown, rent comes from our city-level housing benchmarks for the selected unit type (for example average rent for a 1-bedroom apartment). Rent as % of gross is (monthly rent × 12) ÷ annual gross × 100 using the scenario gross or equivalent gross as labeled in the table. Neighborhoods and exact units vary; use the full calculator to align with your housing choice.
All of the above is for education and planning. Your employer, deductions, credits, and local costs can differ—see our disclaimer on this page or consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.
How to use the relocation salary calculator
Follow these steps to compare cities, then open optional sections to refine housing and other costs.
- Pick your cities. Choose your current metro and your destination (US–US or Canada–Canada). The tool applies each location’s taxes and COL index.
- Enter gross annual salary. Use your base salary in USD or CAD. If you’re paid hourly, annualize first (for example hourly × hours per week × 52).
- Set filing status. Select Single, Married (joint or separate), or Head of household so federal and state or provincial taxes match your situation.
- Compare. Click Compare to see equivalent salary needed, take-home in each city at the same gross, and take-home at the equivalent gross in the new city.
- Add housing and other costs (optional). Expand Housing (rent or buy), Commute, Lifestyle (including childcare), health insurance, and one-time moving costs to see how rent and other spending differ between cities.
California RSU tax after relocation: the "long arm" sourcing rule
Moving out of California does not end California's claim on unvested RSUs. The California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) taxes RSU income based on the ratio of California workdays to total workdays during the entire vesting period — from grant date to vest date — regardless of where you live when the shares vest. (Source: California FTB Publication 1004; OTA Precedential Cases Stabile & Prince, 2020.)
| Scenario | RSU value at vest | CA days % | CA-sourced income | CA tax (~13.3%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-yr vest, left CA after yr 1 | $400,000 | 25% | $100,000 | $13,300 |
| 4-yr vest, left CA after yr 2 | $400,000 | 50% | $200,000 | $26,600 |
| 4-yr vest, left CA after yr 3 | $400,000 | 75% | $300,000 | $39,900 |
| 3-yr vest, left CA after yr 1 | $600,000 | 33% | $200,000 | $26,600 |
Also applies to
- Nonqualified stock options (NQSOs): grant date to exercise date
- Nonqualified deferred comp (NQDC): service years in CA ÷ total service years
- ISOs: no CA tax at exercise, but CA taxes the gain at sale using the same allocation
What this means for your move
If you have significant unvested equity from a California employer, factor the residual CA tax bill into your relocation salary negotiation. The equivalent salary calculator above shows your gross take-home, but CA-sourced equity tax will be an additional obligation at vest. Consult a tax professional familiar with California nonresident equity sourcing before finalizing your move.
Canadian interprovincial moves: 2026 provincial tax rates and the Alberta advantage
Provincial income tax is the largest variable in Canadian take-home pay. The gap between the highest- and lowest-taxed provinces is over 5 percentage points at the top combined rate — translating to thousands of dollars per year. (Source: KPMG 2026 Federal and Provincial Tax Brackets; Sun Life 2026 Top Marginal Rates; TD Wealth 2026 Combined Rate Tables.)
| Province | Top provincial rate | Top combined rate (2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Newfoundland & Labrador | 21.3% | 54.80% | Highest in Canada |
| Nova Scotia | 21.0% | 54.00% | |
| Ontario | 20.53%* | 53.53% | *Includes 56% surtax |
| British Columbia | 20.5% | 53.50% | |
| Quebec | 25.75% | 53.31% | Federal abatement reduces effective rate |
| Manitoba | 17.4% | 50.40% | |
| Saskatchewan | 14.5% | 47.50% | |
| Alberta | 15.0% | 48.00% | No PST; lowest among major provinces |
An Ontario resident earning $150,000 CAD pays approximately $7,000–$8,500 more in combined income tax per year compared to an Alberta resident at the same income. Alberta also charges no provincial sales tax (PST), while Ontario charges 13% HST on most purchases. Use this calculator above to run the exact Ontario vs. Alberta comparison.
8% up to $61,200 → 10% up to $154,259 → 12% up to $185,111 → 13% up to $246,813 → 14% up to $370,220 → 15% above (KPMG 2026)
Ontario's nominal top rate is 13.16%, but a 20% surtax on provincial tax above $5,818, plus 36% above $7,446, pushes the effective top provincial rate to 20.53%
Alberta is the only major province with no provincial sales tax. Other no-PST provinces: NWT, Nunavut, Yukon. Most provinces charge PST 6–10% or participate in HST.
The New York statutory residency trap: why 183 days isn't enough to escape NY taxes
New York uses a dual test for full-year resident status. You are taxed as a NY resident if you meet either: (1) domicile in New York, OR (2) statutory residency — spending more than 183 days in NY and maintaining a "permanent place of abode" in New York. Remote workers who register in Florida or Texas but keep their NYC apartment and work there more than half the year are routinely audited as full NY residents. (Source: NY Tax Law §605; NY TSB-M-18(2)I.)
Statutory residency: how NY taxes you
- 183+ NY days in a tax year, and
- Maintain a permanent place of abode in NY (even a rented apartment counts)
- Result: NY taxes your worldwide income as a full-year resident
- This applies even if you are domiciled in FL, TX, or another state
True domicile change: NY's five-factor test
- Home: sell or sublease NY property; buy/rent a home in new state
- Business: register business and work primarily in new state
- Near and dear: move valued personal property (art, heirlooms, pets) to new state
- Social ties: update religious affiliation, clubs, civic memberships
- Time: keep a day-count log; spending less than 183 days in NY helps, but isn't alone sufficient
California and Massachusetts also aggressively audit high-income taxpayers who claim a domicile change. CA requires proof you intend to make the new state your permanent home.
New York City residents pay an additional ~3.9% city income tax on top of state tax. Moving to NYC's suburbs (Nassau, Westchester) eliminates the city tax while maintaining state tax obligations.
If your employer is in NY but you live elsewhere, check whether NY's 'convenience of the employer' doctrine applies — NY may tax your remote workdays as NY-source income if the remote work is for your own convenience, not a necessity.