Utah Cost of Living Calculator
Compare Utah cost of living (index: 101.3). Calculate equivalent salary needed when moving to or from Utah.
How This Calculator Works
Calculation methodology and assumptions
This calculator compares purchasing power between locations using cost of living indices. Utah's cost of living index is 101.3 (100 = national average). The equivalent salary is calculated as: Current Salary × (Target COL / Current COL). Tax differences are also factored in to show the net financial impact of relocating.
Key State Information
Utah cost of living index: 101.3. Utah is close to the national average in overall cost. Median household income: $79,449. Median 2BR rent: $1310/month.
How to Use This Cost of Living Calculator
- 1
Enter your current income
Input your current annual salary. The calculator uses Living's cost of living index to show how far your money goes compared to the national average (100).
- 2
Review the cost breakdown
See how housing, groceries, transportation, healthcare, and utilities compare to national medians. Housing is typically the largest differentiator between high-cost and low-cost states.
- 3
Compare equivalent salaries
The calculator shows what salary you'd need in another state to maintain the same purchasing power — essential for evaluating remote work offers or relocation decisions.
Example Calculation
How does Living's cost of living affect your purchasing power?
If you earn $70,000 in a state with a cost of living index of 90 (10% below national average), your purchasing power is equivalent to roughly $77,800 in the average US city. Conversely, $70,000 in a state with index 130 (like California or New York) has the same buying power as only $53,850 nationally.
Result: The cost of living difference between the most and least expensive states can be enormous — earning $70K in Mississippi (index ~85) gives you the same lifestyle as someone earning $115K+ in Hawaii (index ~190). Always compare salaries in purchasing power terms, not nominal dollars.
What Affects Your Results
Housing Costs
Median home prices range from ~$150K (West Virginia) to $750K+ (Hawaii, California). Rent differences are proportional. This is the single largest cost-of-living driver.
Healthcare Costs
Health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket costs vary 30–50% across states, driven by provider networks, state regulations, and population health.
Grocery Prices
Food costs are 10–20% higher in states that import most produce (Hawaii, Alaska) and lower in agricultural Midwest states.
Transportation
Gas prices, insurance rates, and commute distances vary by state. Urban states with public transit may offset higher gas costs with lower car-dependency.
Tips for Living Residents
- Housing costs account for 60–70% of cost-of-living differences. If you can work remotely and choose a lower-cost housing market, your effective "raise" can be significant.
- Research specific cities within Living, not just state averages. A state with a low average cost of living often has expensive metro areas.
- Don't forget taxes when comparing. A state with a lower cost of living but higher taxes may not save you as much as expected.
- Grocery and utility costs vary less than housing. If you're budget-conscious, housing choice is the single biggest lever you can pull.
- Use this calculator alongside the salary calculator to compare your after-tax, after-housing disposable income across states.
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StateCalc Team
Editorial Team
The StateCalc team builds free financial calculators using data from official government sources including the IRS, U.S. Census Bureau, BLS, and state revenue departments. All formulas are validated by an automated test suite and cross-referenced against published data.
Our editorial standardsFrequently Asked Questions
What is the cost of living in Utah?
Utah's cost of living index is 101.3, where 100 is the national average. This means living in Utah costs about 1% more than the national average.
Is Utah expensive to live in?
Utah has a moderate cost of living, close to the national average. Median home price: $470,000.
How much do I need to earn in Utah to live comfortably?
Based on a cost of living index of 101.3 and the 50-30-20 budgeting rule, a comfortable salary in Utah would be approximately $53,081/year for a single person renting a 2BR apartment.
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