Quote:
Originally Posted by F1 Tommy
Alot of people from the east coast already here since 2020!! The New York Times can write all the articles it wants saying Chicago is more expensive than NY. No one believes them as it is not true.
|
LOL yeah - such a ridiculous thing to say of them. Our 2 bedroom apartment in South Loop here was cheaper than our 1 bedroom apartment in Long Island City (Queens). And the condo we bought here in Lincoln Park - 4 bedrooms, 2400 sq ft with 2 outdoor spaces - was over $300K cheaper than the 1 bedroom condos in Long Island City in the building next door to our old apartment. One of my co-workers just moved from his West Village 2 bedroom apartment to another part of Manhattan and they listed it for $7800/mo.
Also our income taxes here are around half of what they were in NYC. We both moved with our NYC salaries so that was good. Then they gave me a raise in Chicago a little after, so - good move for us. I hired a senior person in Chicago under me not long ago and the salary is what some people in our NYC office make and even above some of them. Also offered others at similar-to-NYC levels for us. The top salary range for my level for NYC for my company is only $15K or so higher than Chicago. Factoring in everything it's not even close - Chicago is way cheaper. We have had many people move to cities like Dallas from NYC to take advantage of how we handle these things too, at certain levels.
Property taxes are definitely more here but income tax is a bit lower coupled with property prices being way lower - it's just flat out cheaper here and it's not even close. Transportation is a little more and there's more areas of Chicago you might need a car in, but public transit there is a little more expensive. Also, most people I worked with lived in NJ or Long Island, and would actually end up paying quite a bit per month for things like LIRR. To put it lightly, some of the suburbs of NJ that people are "forced" to move to are still more expensive than much of the north side of Chicago and even downtown. Someone who rents or owns in Jersey City or Hoboken these days can probably find themselves being able to afford something nice in Lincoln Park anyway.
If you adjust for the difference in income tax and consider the price of housing, we basically pay about $400/mo more after factoring in taxes for our 4 bedroom condo here than what we were paying for our 1 bedroom apartment in NYC including everything (property taxes, insurance, utilities/internet, etc). Since we had a kid, we would have had to find a 2+ bedroom condo in NYC which is pretty expensive especially given that we wanted something decently nice and not crap. Basically looking at minimum of $1.5M for a 2 bedroom for our constraints. This was a no-brainer move for us. There are things we miss about NYC but we're happy in Chicago. The analogue in even Brooklyn to our place would have cost us at least $3.5M which we cannot afford. There is no way if we stayed in NYC that we could have afforded this type of place. Yet here we are in Chicago and with same (actually higher now) salaries than we had a year ago in NYC.
The only thing that's similar between the cities is the cost of food, though NYC may have gotten a bit more expensive this year with that but not by a huge margin.