Relocation

Cost of living by state

Weighing a move? Compare any two states side by side — cost of living, taxes, and demographics — and see what a physician, NP, or PA salary is really worth once it's adjusted for local prices. Green means cheaper or better; red means pricier or worse.

Overall cost of living

Rhode Island is 8.5% more expensive overall than North Carolina.

What a physician's take-home is really worth

Median pay → estimated after-tax take-home → adjusted for each state's cost of living.

North Carolina

Median pay
$247,750
After tax
$171,279

$181,632worth here

Rhode Island

Median pay
$236,360
After tax
$163,336

$159,664worth here

Take-home is an estimate for a single filer taking the standard deduction (federal + FICA + state income tax, wages only) — not tax advice.

MetricNorth CarolinaRhode Island
Cost of living (US avg = 100)
Overall cost of living94.3102.3
Housing (rent)81.4105.6
Utilities88.6146.7
Goods96.697.2
Other services98.2102.8
Taxes
Top income tax rate4.25%5.99%
Sales tax (avg)7%7%
Property tax (effective)0.62%1.05%
About the state
Population10,584,3401,095,371
Median household income$69,904$86,372
Median age39.140.5
Homeownership rate66.40%63.30%
Median home value$259,400$368,800
▼ green = lower cost / better▲ red = higher cost / worse

Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities (2024) · U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts · Tax Foundation. Figures are the latest published; cost-of-living is a price-level index, not tax-adjusted take-home pay.

Browse all state profiles

VitalPost shows sourced, public data for context only — it isn't financial or tax advice. Cost-of-living is a price-level index (US average = 100); taxes shown are statewide/averaged and don't capture local income or the specifics of your situation.

Cost of Living by State — Compare & Relocate — VitalPost