Austin vs New York City:
Cost of Living Comparison 2026

In 2026, a $300,000-a-year earner moving from New York City to Austin saves an estimated $35,000–$55,000 per year, primarily from eliminating New York State income tax (4–10.9%) and NYC city income tax (3.876%), plus dramatically lower housing costs. Austin's median home price of $550,000 compares against Manhattan's $1.3 million. Here is everything you need to know about the Austin vs NYC cost of living comparison for 2026.
MONTHLY COST BREAKDOWN: AUSTIN VS NEW YORK CITY 2026 Housing · Taxes · Transportation · Other Expenses $10K $7.5K $5K $2.5K $150K Income $300K Income $5,000 AUSTIN $9,250 NYC $8,200 AUSTIN $14,550 NYC Housing Taxes Transport Other NYC (all categories) grewalregroup.com · (512) 617-0001 · Compass RE Texas
Estimated monthly costs for Austin vs NYC at $150K and $300K gross income. Includes housing, taxes, transportation, and average discretionary spending. Sources: BLS, Census Bureau, NYC.gov.

Why This Comparison Matters in 2026

The migration from New York City to Austin has accelerated dramatically over the past several years. Post-pandemic remote work flexibility, New York's persistent tax burden, and Austin's explosive job market growth have combined to make the Austin vs NYC cost of living conversation one of the most relevant financial decisions thousands of high-earning professionals face in 2026.

This is not merely a lifestyle question, it is a wealth-building decision. For finance professionals, media executives, hedge fund analysts, and tech workers who once felt tethered to Manhattan or Brooklyn, the numbers behind a relocation to Austin can be transformative. When taxes, housing, and daily expenses are totaled, a family earning $300,000 annually may find they live equivalent or better lifestyles in Austin while retaining $35,000–$55,000 more of their income each year.

Below is a comprehensive, data-grounded breakdown of every major cost category, from housing and taxes to groceries and private schools, so you can make an informed decision.


Housing: The Biggest Gap

Housing is where the Austin vs NYC cost comparison becomes most stark. The difference is not incremental, it is generational-wealth-level significant.

Home Purchase Prices (2026)

Market Segment Austin New York City Advantage
Median Home Price $550,000 $1,300,000+ (Manhattan) Austin saves 58%+
Brooklyn Median $550,000 $900,000 Austin saves 39%
Queens Median $550,000 $700,000 Austin saves 21%
Cost Per Square Foot $250–$400/sqft $1,000–$3,000/sqft Austin 4–12x cheaper
What $800K Buys 4BR Westlake home, yard, 2-car garage 1BR co-op in Brooklyn Austin dramatically wins

The $800,000 comparison is particularly illuminating. In Austin, $800,000 places a buyer squarely in Westlake, one of the most desirable neighborhoods in Central Texas, with access to top-rated Eanes ISD schools, hill country views, and a spacious yard. In New York City, that same budget acquires a modest one-bedroom co-op apartment in Brooklyn, likely with monthly maintenance fees of $800–$1,500 on top of the mortgage, no outdoor space, and a parking spot costing an additional $400–$700 per month if available at all.

Renting: Austin vs NYC

For those not yet ready to buy, the rental market tells a similar story:

A renter paying Manhattan prices who relocates to Austin saves approximately $34,800 per year on rent alone, before any tax savings are factored in.


Taxes: Texas Zero vs New York's Layered Burden

The tax equation is where Austin's financial advantage becomes mathematically overwhelming for high earners.

New York State Income Tax

New York State levies income tax on a graduated scale ranging from 4% to 10.9%, depending on income level. For someone earning $300,000, the effective rate is typically in the 7–9% range for state tax alone. According to the IRS and NYC.gov guidelines, this creates a substantial burden for six-figure earners.

NYC City Income Tax, An Additional Layer

New York City residents pay an additional city income tax on top of the state tax. This city tax ranges up to 3.876%. For a $300,000 earner, this adds approximately $8,000–$11,000 per year in city taxes alone, a bill that simply does not exist for Austin residents.

Texas Income Tax: Zero

Texas has no state income tax. This is enshrined in the Texas Constitution. For verification, see the Texas Comptroller's office. There is no city income tax in Austin either. The only major tax that Texas residents pay that can be comparable is property tax, but even there, the lower purchase prices in Austin mean absolute property tax bills are dramatically lower than NYC equivalent properties.

Total Tax Savings Summary

Income Level Est. NY State + City Tax Texas State Tax Annual Savings
$150,000 ~$16,000–$20,000 $0 $16,000–$20,000/yr
$200,000 ~$24,000–$30,000 $0 $24,000–$30,000/yr
$300,000 ~$35,000–$55,000 $0 $35,000–$55,000/yr
$500,000 ~$70,000–$95,000 $0 $70,000–$95,000/yr

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Census Bureau, Texas Comptroller. Tax estimates vary based on deductions, filing status, and applicable credits. Consult a licensed CPA for your specific situation.


Transportation: MetroCard Convenience vs Car-Required Austin

This is perhaps the most honest area where NYC holds a genuine advantage, and where Austin transplants must consciously adjust their expectations.

New York City Transportation

NYC's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is one of the largest transit systems in the world, operating 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. For a flat fare (currently approximately $2.90 per ride or a monthly unlimited MetroCard at ~$132/month), New Yorkers can reach virtually every corner of the five boroughs and connecting suburbs. Car ownership in Manhattan is often not just unnecessary but actively burdensome, parking can cost $500–$800/month in Midtown garages, and insurance, tolls, and maintenance add further costs. Many NYC households choose not to own a vehicle at all.

Austin Transportation Reality

Austin is fundamentally a car-dependent city. Capital Metro operates bus routes and the MetroRail line, and the city's ambitious Project Connect light rail expansion is underway, but completion of major lines extends into the late 2020s. In 2026, the practical reality for most Austin residents is that a personal vehicle is required for daily life.

However, the math often favors Austin even here. Monthly car expenses in Austin (car payment, insurance, fuel, maintenance) typically run $700–$1,100/month total. Compare to Manhattan's transit pass + occasional car rental + parking for visits = similar or higher cost, with the added benefit that Austin residents often park free almost everywhere they go.

Commute Times

Austin's traffic congestion has grown, particularly on Mopac (Loop 1) and I-35, but compared to navigating the L train or sitting on a stalled A/C/E line at rush hour, most transplants report that Austin commutes feel more manageable even when longer by clock time.


Groceries, Dining, and Daily Expenses

According to cost-of-living research compiled from Bureau of Labor Statistics consumer expenditure data, New York City is approximately 25% more expensive than Austin for groceries and everyday consumer goods.

Grocery Costs

Restaurant & Dining Costs

Austin's food scene has matured dramatically, offering a diverse range from celebrated BBQ (Franklin Barbecue, la Barbecue, Interstellar) to contemporary fine dining and international cuisine. Prices at comparable quality restaurants are meaningfully lower:


Private Schools: A $20,000+ Annual Difference

For families with school-age children, education costs can be a major driver of overall cost-of-living differences.

A family with two children in NYC private schools may be spending $100,000–$120,000 per year on education alone. Moving to Austin and enrolling in Eanes ISD public schools means that entire cost drops to zero, or to $40,000–$60,000 if choosing private school. This single factor adds meaningfully to the overall financial case for relocation.


The NYC Finance Migration: Why Hedge Funds and Goldman Sachs Remote Workers Choose Austin

The migration of financial services professionals from New York City to Austin is well-documented in both media coverage and U.S. Census Bureau migration data. Several specific dynamics are driving this trend in 2026:

Remote Work Permanence

A meaningful portion of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Citadel, and other major financial institution employees who shifted to remote work during 2020–2022 have successfully negotiated permanent or hybrid remote arrangements. For those earning $300,000–$1M+ annually in finance, a relocation to Austin while maintaining New York-level compensation creates an extraordinary arbitrage: NYC salary, Texas tax rates, Austin cost of living.

Hedge Fund Presence in Austin

Several hedge funds and investment firms have formally relocated or established Austin offices, including Duquesne Family Office, various family offices, and technology-adjacent venture capital operations. The arrival of institutional money in Austin has made the city increasingly compatible with the professional expectations of NYC finance transplants, including the quality of advisors, attorneys, accountants, and deal flow.

Austin Tech vs NYC Finance Culture

Austin's dominant economic culture is technology-driven, shaped by Dell, Apple's second campus, Tesla's Gigafactory Texas, Oracle's headquarters relocation, and thousands of tech startups. NYC finance culture emphasizes hierarchy, formal office environments, and the social premium of Manhattan zip codes. Austin tech culture, by contrast, values entrepreneurship, output over optics, and lifestyle flexibility.

For NYC finance professionals, Austin can feel like a cultural reset, less formal, less status-driven by geography, and more focused on results. Many transplants cite the "relief" of not being evaluated by which block they live on.


Quality of Life Metrics: What You Gain and What You Trade

What Austin Offers Over NYC

What NYC Offers That Austin Does Not Match


Full Cost Comparison Summary: Austin vs NYC 2026

Category Austin, TX New York City, NY Winner
Median Home Price $550,000 $1,300,000 (Manhattan) Austin
1BR Avg Rent $1,600/mo $3,800–$4,500/mo Austin
Cost Per Sqft $250–$400 $1,000–$3,000 Austin
State Income Tax 0% 4–10.9% Austin
City Income Tax None Up to 3.876% Austin
Avg Commute 25 min 45 min Austin
Grocery Costs Baseline ~25% higher Austin
Private School (per child) $20,000–$30,000/yr $50,000–$60,000+/yr Austin
Sunny Days/Year 228 167 Austin
Public Transit Quality Limited (car-required) World-class 24/7 subway NYC
Cultural Density Growing, vibrant Unmatched globally NYC
International Flights Expanding JFK/EWR, elite NYC
$300K Earner Annual Savings Austin: $35K–$55K/yr

Where NYC Transplants Buy in Austin

When finance and media professionals from New York City choose Austin, they are not slumming it. They are upgrading, in terms of space, quality of finishes, and community. The luxury Austin neighborhoods that attract the most sophisticated NYC buyers include:


Frequently Asked Questions

Austin is significantly less expensive than New York City across nearly every major cost category. Housing costs roughly 40–57% less, with Austin's median home price around $550,000 versus Manhattan's $1.3 million or Brooklyn's $900,000. A one-bedroom apartment averages $1,600/month in Austin versus $3,800/month in NYC ($4,500 in Manhattan). Combined with Texas having zero state income tax versus New York's 4–10.9% plus NYC's additional 3.876% city tax, a $300,000 earner can save $35,000–$55,000 per year by relocating to Austin.

In Austin, $800,000 typically buys a 4-bedroom home in the Westlake area with a private yard, 2-car garage, and strong school district. In New York City, the same budget may secure a 1-bedroom co-op apartment in Brooklyn, often with HOA maintenance fees of $800–$1,500/month on top of the mortgage, no yard, and limited square footage. The cost per square foot difference is stark: Austin averages $250–$400/sqft versus $1,000–$3,000/sqft in NYC.

New York State charges 4–10.9% income tax, and New York City adds an additional 3.876% city income tax on top. Texas has zero state income tax. For someone earning $300,000 per year, the combined tax savings from eliminating both state and city taxes is typically $35,000–$55,000 per year, depending on deductions and filing status. This is one of the primary financial drivers behind the NYC-to-Austin migration trend and the reason so many Goldman Sachs and hedge fund professionals are making the move.

No, NYC's subway and transit system is world-class and car-optional. Austin is car-dependent, though it has a bus system and is expanding its light rail via Project Connect. Most Austin residents drive; the average commute is about 25 minutes versus NYC's 45-minute average. Many NYC transplants find the car requirement an adjustment, but appreciate the shorter commutes, free parking, and lower transportation costs overall. Parking is free at nearly every destination in Austin, a concept foreign to Manhattan residents.

NYC finance and media professionals relocating to Austin tend to gravitate toward Westlake Hills, Rollingwood, West Lake Hills, Tarrytown, Barton Hills, and newer master-planned communities like Bee Cave and Lakeway. These neighborhoods offer high-end homes, top-rated schools, and a lifestyle that mirrors upscale suburban NYC communities, but at a fraction of the price and with no state income tax. Many describe the Westlake corridor as "Greenwich without the commute tax and without the New York income tax."


Shivraj Grewal, luxury real estate agent in Austin, TX

Shivraj Grewal

CLHMS Guild  ·  CNE  ·  TREC #736060  ·  Compass RE Texas

Shivraj Grewal is a luxury real estate agent and the founder of Grewal RE Group, based in Austin, Texas. He specializes in relocation from major metros including New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, and Los Angeles into Austin's luxury neighborhoods. Shivraj is a Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist (CLHMS Guild) and Certified Negotiation Expert (CNE).

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Sources & References:
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), bls.gov  |  U.S. Census Bureau, census.gov  |  Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, comptroller.texas.gov  |  New York City Government, nyc.gov  |  Internal Revenue Service, irs.gov

Disclaimer: All statistics are estimates based on publicly available data as of 2026. Tax savings vary by individual income, deductions, and filing status. Consult a licensed CPA or financial advisor. Real estate data reflects general market trends and individual properties vary. Shivraj Grewal is a licensed Texas real estate agent, TREC #736060, affiliated with Compass RE Texas.