Relocation calculator

Cost of Living Adjustment Calculator

Estimate the salary you may need in another city after accounting for taxes, housing, and a simple cost index for non-housing expenses.

Calculate cost of living adjustment

How to read the result

A cost of living adjustment is not a universal truth. It is a structured way to test whether a new salary preserves your after-tax cash flow after housing and everyday costs change. The calculator separates housing from the general cost index because rent usually drives the biggest difference between cities.

The current city index is the baseline. If your current city is set to 100 and the target city is set to 115, the model treats non-housing costs as 15% higher in the target city. You can edit the index values to reflect your own research or use a neutral comparison where both cities are set to 100.

InputWhy it mattersHow to use it
Effective tax rateDifferent states, provinces, deductions, and payroll taxes change monthly cash flow.Use a conservative estimate if you are unsure.
HousingRent or mortgage often moves more than groceries or transport.Use the rent you would actually consider, not only a citywide average.
Cost indexApproximates non-housing differences such as food, services, and local prices.Keep it simple for early screening, then refine after shortlisting neighborhoods.

When this calculator is most useful

This page is useful before a negotiation, internal transfer, remote-work move, or relocation conversation. It gives you a salary equivalent to discuss, but it should not be the only factor. Benefits, healthcare, commute time, career growth, childcare, partner income, visa status, and personal priorities can all outweigh a simple cost calculation.

Common mistakes

The most common mistake is using gross salary only. A second mistake is comparing city averages without checking the specific neighborhoods you would actually choose. A third mistake is ignoring one-time moving costs, deposits, new furniture, vehicle registration, insurance changes, and the cash buffer needed during the transition.

Related pages

FAQ

What is a cost of living adjustment calculator?

It estimates the salary you may need in a target city to keep a similar after-tax lifestyle after adjusting for housing and non-housing cost differences.

Is a cost of living adjustment the same as a raise?

No. A raise increases nominal pay, while a cost of living adjustment compares purchasing power after taxes, rent, and recurring expenses.

Should I use gross salary or take-home pay?

Gross salary is useful for comparison, but take-home pay is the better practical budget anchor because taxes and deductions affect monthly cash flow.

Can this calculator replace tax or relocation advice?

No. It is an educational estimate. Verify tax, benefits, insurance, housing, and moving costs before making a decision.

Disclaimer: This page provides educational estimates only. It is not financial, tax, legal, real estate, or relocation advice.