Assembling your view…
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Complete relocation analysis: cost difference, salary adjustment, monthly expenses, taxes, home prices, and job market comparison.
Moving to Denver looks like a financial upgrade — better income-to-cost ratio.
Denver has a cost index of 113 vs 94 for Greensboro. Denver is 19 points more expensive overall. Monthly rent goes from $1,382 to $1,818 (+32%).
If you earn the Greensboro median of $58,884, you would need approximately $70,786/year in Denver to maintain equivalent purchasing power, based on the cost index difference of 19 points (20%).
Median rent in Greensboro is $1,382/month. In Denver it is $1,818/month — a difference of +$436 per month, or $5,232 per year.
Moving to Denver looks like a financial upgrade — better income-to-cost ratio. The salary equivalent to maintain your current lifestyle is $70,786/year in Denver. The median income there is $91,681.
Estimated monthly essentials total $3,181 in Greensboro vs $3,964 in Denver — a difference of +$783/month (+$9,396/year).
The median home price in Denver is $530,920 vs $261,036 in Greensboro. With 20% down and a 6.5% rate, the estimated monthly mortgage payment is $2,685 in Denver vs $1,320 in Greensboro.