Salary Needed To Live Comfortably in Major U.S. Cities

OneEyedDiva

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New Jersey
Shown in map form; article starts below the map. I'm surprised that New York City, Jersey City, N.J. and San Francisco aren't higher. It would be interesting to find out what average salaries are in these cities, but I haven't taken time to do that.

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This map shows the income required for a comfortable lifestyle across 56 U.S. cities, factoring in housing, food, transportation, savings, and discretionary spending." https://www.visualcapitalist.com/mapped-the-salary-needed-to-live-comfortably-in-u-s-cities/
 
Thanks for sharing. Not surprised about the incomes needed in the Northeast, California or Seattle. No wonder we've seen such an influx in Texas. Imagine someone who is employed by a tech company in Seattle, making their standard salary, working from home and paying for the cost of living in Texas. :oops:
 
Thanks for sharing. Not surprised about the incomes needed in the Northeast, California or Seattle. No wonder we've seen such an influx in Texas. Imagine someone who is employed by a tech company in Seattle, making their standard salary, working from home and paying for the cost of living in Texas. :oops:
Yeah if they can work it out like that. Salaries in lower income states are often commensurate with cost of living in those states. One of the reasons my son is not going to move to North Carolina where his wife resides is because he would lose a significant amount of pay even though he would be transferring within the same company. In fact, even if they moved to south Jersey, his salary would be reduced because the division he works for is not available in those locations. So when DIL finishes her courses (being paid for by the state of N.C.) they agreed they'll live up here.
 
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Interesting.

From the map: “single adult, based on the 50/30/20 rule: 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings.”

No amount of income is enough without proper management.

"Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pound ought and six, result misery." - Charles Dickens
 
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if you have to ask the salary question in California or NYC, you can't afford to live there "comfortably ", but you can live there "frugally ".
 
It’s hard to get a good read on the standard of living with just one bit of information.

In my city the median family income is $57,000.00.

28.8% of all residents and 40% of children live below the federal poverty level.

A comfortable salary for a single person is in a range of $65,000.00-$75,000.00.

We have several large companies, a large state hospital, several colleges and universities that pay excellent wages but many, many, people are mired in poverty due to their personal choices and circumstances while others have simply been left behind.

The thing that always fascinates me is that we all seem to make it work.
 
In my city the median family income is $57,000.00.

A comfortable salary for a single person is in a range of $65,000.00-$75,000.00.

The thing that always fascinates me is that we all seem to make it work.
I understand. Living comfortably means different things to each of us. When I take an average of the amount I've spent each year over the past 3-4 years, not only could I make $65,000 work, but I could save half of it, without missing out on anything I wanted or needed.
 
OK, I see the issue I'm having with this data. The 50/30/20 formula they use doesn't even come close to how I manage my finances. I have zero debt, no car payment, rent or mortgage. A few years back I moved to Albuquerque explicitly to make money and increase my savings for retirement. Even including rent (I lived in a small freshly remodeled apartment in a decent neighborhood) my total bills averaged 30% - 35% of my net earnings (after taxes).

I just find it hard to imagine the majority of Americans manage their finances so poorly according the the data?
 
It’s hard to get a good read on the standard of living with just one bit of information.

In my city the median family income is $57,000.00.

28.8% of all residents and 40% of children live below the federal poverty level.

A comfortable salary for a single person is in a range of $65,000.00-$75,000.00.

We have several large companies, a large state hospital, several colleges and universities that pay excellent wages but many, many, people are mired in poverty due to their personal choices and circumstances while others have simply been left behind.

The thing that always fascinates me is that we all seem to make it work.
In Holland the poverty level is not poor. I had 50 a week for a while with 3 kids after I helped someone out. No food bank or anything. Yeah it was not fun, but the reason was that I had a house with a room for each kid. And I see that all the time when someone complains on Dutch tv that they're oh so poor. They can always just go to the foodbank and they always have a house like I had. Rent rooms out, split the house up. Don't ask me for money when you get just as much as me, but want to have a house and a car.
 
I don't doubt the statistical analysis the mapping is based on.

Personally, I've lived a satisfying life by keeping "wants" below 30% — and feeling comfortable with that. That means not always obtaining the latest, greatest, and shiniest of consumer products. Also, probably my DW and I have met needs by doing somewhat more for ourselves, compared with the norm, rather than paying for everything. Undeniably, over time savings have proved their value.

We've been fortunate to live as part of a group of friends and neighbors who are supportive of one another, and share a great deal. This doesn't mean every neighbor, but enough to make a difference over what I believe is the North American norm. And, if you looked at us as a group, we also support local, independent business as much as we can.
 
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