Home/Moving to Houston/Cost of Living
Houston cost of living, by the line.
Houston versus New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Seattle, DC, Atlanta, Dallas, and Denver — line-item math on tax, housing, insurance, utilities, and transport from a Houston REALTOR® who works relocation moves from all ten every month.
0%
Texas State Income Tax
~$330K
Houston Median Home Price
~5%
Above National Average (vs +25-65% for top metros)
Top 1% REMAX Producer|50+ Five-Star Google Reviews|ABR Certified · LUXE Designation
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Justin Adams · Buyer · Referral
“I never felt pressured into making on-the-spot decisions or going over my budget. Eddie truly had my best interest at heart while representing me.”
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The honest picture
Where Houston actually lands on the national cost-of-living curve
Houston runs roughly 5% above the national cost-of-living average. That puts it materially below every major coastal metro and well below several mid-tier markets that get characterized as “affordable” (Denver, Seattle, DC, Boston) but actually cost 25–50% more once full math is included.
The reason Houston math works isn’t one factor — it’s the stack. Zero state income tax, median home prices well under coastal benchmarks, energy costs near the national bottom (Houston is the energy capital, after all), and a service economy with prices indexed close to national average. The trade-offs are real (humidity, hurricane season, no walkability outside the Inner Loop) and I cover them honestly in the pros-and-cons spoke when it ships. But on pure cost-of-living math, Houston is consistently in the top 5 best-value major US metros.
I’m Eddie Weir, a Top 1% REMAX Producer based in Houston. I work with buyers relocating from every major US metro every month — here’s how the line items actually compare.
Side-by-side
Houston versus the top 10 relocation source metros
All figures are for a typical 4-person household earning $250K with a 3–4 bedroom home in a middle-market neighborhood. Tax rates are effective on a $250K AGI. Home prices reflect 2026 medians for comparable family homes (not city-wide medians, which include cheaper inventory we’re not actually comparing to).
| Metro | State + City Income Tax (eff) | Median 3-4 BR Home | Property Tax Rate | Cost Index vs Nat’l Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houston, TX | 0% | ~$400K–$650K | ~2.3–3.2% (incl MUD) | ~+5% |
| New York, NY (NYC resident) | ~10.7% combined NY State + NYC | ~$1.5M+ Manhattan, $900K-1.4M Westchester/LI | ~1.2–2.5% | ~+65% (NYC) |
| San Francisco, CA | ~10.4% effective at $250K (CA top 13.3%) | ~$1.5M+ in SF, $1.2M+ Bay Area suburbs | ~1.1% (Prop 13) | ~+50–60% |
| Los Angeles, CA | ~9.3% effective | ~$900K–$1.4M | ~1.1% (Prop 13) | ~+40% |
| Chicago, IL | ~4.95% IL flat | ~$450K–$700K | ~2.0–2.5% | ~+15–20% |
| Boston, MA | ~5% MA flat (9% over $1M) | ~$800K–$1.2M | ~1.2% | ~+30–35% |
| Seattle, WA | 0% (WA no income tax) | ~$800K–$1.1M | ~0.9% | ~+25–30% |
| Washington, DC | ~7.5% effective (DC) or VA/MD ~5.5% | ~$700K–$1M | ~0.85% (DC); ~1.0% (VA/MD) | ~+25% |
| Atlanta, GA | ~5.39% GA flat | ~$400K–$600K | ~1.1% | ~+5–10% |
| Dallas-Fort Worth, TX | 0% (TX) | ~$400K–$600K | ~2.2–3.0% (incl MUD) | ~+5% |
| Denver, CO | ~4.4% CO flat | ~$600K–$850K | ~0.5% (low rate, but assessments climb) | ~+15–20% |
The math compounds. A $250K household in NYC loses roughly $27K to state and city tax with no federal SALT shelter, then pays roughly double for housing. The annual savings of moving to Houston — before any other cost-of-living factor — sits around $25K–$45K. Five years in Houston, that’s a paid-off Texas mortgage of difference.
Beyond housing + tax
The line items most cost-of-living calculators miss
Utilities
Houston electricity sits at $0.12–$0.15/kWh on Texas retail-choice plans, versus $0.28–$0.34/kWh for Con Edison (NYC) and $0.30+/kWh for PG&E (Bay Area). Summer-peak Houston household runs $250–$400/month due to AC, but winter is near-zero. Annual utility spend (electric + heat + water) typically beats coastal California and Northeast metros by $1,500–$3,500/year — mostly because Houston winters don’t require expensive heating oil or electric resistance heat.
Auto insurance + gas
Texas auto insurance rates are mid-pack nationally. Houston gas runs $2.80–$3.20/gallon (Texas refines roughly a third of US capacity, so retail prices stay low). Most of California and the Northeast pay $4.50–$5.50/gallon. Two-car family savings on fuel alone: $2,000–$4,000/year.
Homeowner’s insurance (the trade-off line)
This is where Houston math gets less favorable. Texas homeowner’s insurance runs $2,500–$4,500/year for a typical 3-4 bedroom, versus $1,500–$3,500 in lower-risk markets like Atlanta or Denver. Texas wind, hail, and hurricane exposure drives the premium higher. Still net positive when combined with the lower property tax base, but worth knowing.
Groceries, restaurants, services
Houston runs within 5% of the national average on groceries, restaurant pricing, and personal services (haircuts, dry cleaning, gym, child care). Compare that to NYC (+25–40%), Bay Area (+15–25%), DC (+15–20%). Day-to-day cost savings of $4,000–$8,000/year for a 4-person household versus a Bay Area or NYC equivalent.
Commute + transit
Houston is a driving city — no transit-replacement story. But if you’re leaving NYC, the $130–$500/month MTA + commuter rail + parking spend disappears. Same for Bay Area BART + parking. Houston commute costs are mostly gas + your car payment, which is in your existing budget regardless.
Want this run for your situation?
Send me your current city, income band, and family size — I’ll come back with a line-item comparison between your current metro and a specific Houston neighborhood matched to your budget.
For sellers in expensive metros
The home-equity gap is where most of the move pays for itself
For households selling out of NYC, SF, LA, Boston, or DC, the home-equity differential is often $400K–$900K. Even after Texas property tax (higher rate, lower base), the differential funds either a paid-off Houston home or a substantial investment cushion. Below are the typical equity outcomes by source metro for a household selling a $1M home and buying a $500K Houston home.
| Selling From | Typical Home Sale Net | Houston Purchase | Equity After Move |
|---|---|---|---|
| NYC (Manhattan) | ~$1.4M–$2.0M co-op or condo | ~$550K Energy Corridor or Memorial | ~$800K–$1.4M cash deployable |
| SF Bay Area | ~$1.5M–$2.2M house | ~$550K–$650K Memorial or Woodlands | ~$900K–$1.5M deployable |
| LA (Westside) | ~$1.2M–$1.8M house | ~$500K–$650K Bellaire or Katy | ~$600K–$1.1M deployable |
| Boston (Inside 95) | ~$1.0M–$1.5M house | ~$500K Sugar Land or Cypress | ~$500K–$1.0M deployable |
| DC (NW or Bethesda) | ~$900K–$1.3M | ~$500K Sugar Land or Pearland | ~$400K–$800K deployable |
Many out-of-state buyers I work with apply the equity differential as a paid-off mortgage; some keep the Houston home leveraged and put the cash into investments (see the Houston investor guide and portfolio scaling guide); some go halfway. The right answer depends on your CPA conversation and your existing assets — not a number a relocation calculator can produce.
The questions buyers actually ask
FAQ — Houston cost of living
What does “5% above national average” actually mean for my situation?
Does Texas’s higher property tax wipe out the no-state-income-tax advantage?
What’s the cost-of-living impact of being in a Houston MUD district?
How does Houston compare to Dallas-Fort Worth on cost?
What’s Houston’s effective tax burden as a percentage of total income?
Are healthcare costs better or worse in Houston?
How do utility bills actually compare on an annual basis?
Does Houston make sense if I’m moving from a lower-cost metro like Atlanta or Phoenix?
What about retirees on fixed income?
What hidden costs do most cost-of-living calculators miss?
Related relocation guides
Other Houston relocation guides
Moving to Houston from California — Prop 13 vs Texas property tax, neighborhood matches by California origin.
Moving to Houston from New York — SALT cap math, tri-state property tax comparison.
Moving to Houston Checklist — 60-90 day timeline with Texas-specific deadlines and gotchas.
Moving to Houston (main hub) — the full Houston relocation playbook.
Ready to run your cost-of-living math?
Tell me your current city, income band, and family situation — I’ll come back with a line-item comparison between your current metro and matched Houston neighborhoods, with the actual numbers your situation will see.