After taxes and cost of living, less than you think.
A $100,000 salary sounds like a lot. In New York City, it translates to about $47,900 in real purchasing power — after state and city income taxes take their 10.4% cut and the cost of living (87% above the national average) does the rest.
Median rent for a one-bedroom in Manhattan runs $3,200 a month. That's $38,400 a year before you've bought a single grocery. Put another way: housing alone consumes roughly 55% of your take-home pay. Most financial advice says keep rent under 30%.
That doesn't mean $100k in NYC is unlivable — people do it, and some of them are even okay. But it means you're not rich. You're middle-class with a good-sounding number on your offer letter. The question worth asking is what that same $100k gets you somewhere else. In Austin, the purchasing power equivalent is around $82,600. In Indianapolis, it's closer to $96,000.
If you want to run your actual salary — not just $100k — against any city in the country, the tool below does the math including taxes.
— Jay K.
Run your actual salary against New York City or anywhere else — takes 30 seconds.
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