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
Nevada is 7.9% more expensive overall than Wyoming.
What a physician's take-home is really worth
Median pay → estimated after-tax take-home → adjusted for each state's cost of living.
Wyoming
- Median pay
- $321,630
- After tax
- $228,086
$246,047worth here
Nevada
- Median pay
- $251,310
- After tax
- $183,604
$183,604worth here
Take-home is an estimate for a single filer taking the standard deduction (federal + FICA + state income tax, wages only) — not tax advice.
| Metric | Wyoming | Nevada |
|---|---|---|
| Cost of living (US avg = 100) | ||
| Overall cost of living | 92.7 | 100.0 |
| Housing (rent) | 71.1 | 114.1 |
| Utilities | 78.4 | 90.5 |
| Goods | 95.4 | 96.3 |
| Other services | 100.4 | 98.7 |
| Taxes | ||
| Top income tax rate | 0% | 0% |
| Sales tax (avg) | 5.44% | 8.24% |
| Property tax (effective) | 0.55% | 0.49% |
| About the state | ||
| Population | 579,761 | 3,141,000 |
| Median household income | $74,815 | $75,561 |
| Median age | 38.8 | 38.9 |
| Homeownership rate | 71.90% | 59.30% |
| Median home value | $285,100 | $406,100 |
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.