Median rent is 35% lower in Kansas City ($1,123/mo vs $1,729/mo). Buying is cheaper in Kansas City, where the median home runs $167,400 versus $555,300. Households earn more in Austin ($93,658 vs $62,401 a year). Taken together, Kansas City is the more affordable choice with a cost index of 93.2 against 98.3 — about 5% lower overall prices. After adjusting income for local prices, a typical paycheck stretches further in Austin, TX.
Cost of living verdict
Kansas City is 5% cheaper overall
Cost of Living Index: 93.2 in Kansas City vs 98.3 in Austin (US national average = 100)
City A
Austin, TX
City B
Kansas City, KS
How much would you need to earn in Kansas City, KS to maintain your standard of living from Austin, TX?
Equivalent salary in Kansas City, KS
$71,129
You could earn $3,871 less (5% lower) and break even.
Based on BEA Regional Price Parity (cost index) for each metro area. This estimates overall purchasing power; it does not account for taxes or take-home pay differences.
Metric
Austin
Texas
Kansas City
Kansas
Population
Median Household Income
Annual
Median Gross Rent
Per month
Median Home Value
Cost of Living Index
US avg = 100
1BR Fair Market Rent
HUD FMR
2BR Fair Market Rent
HUD FMR
3BR Fair Market Rent
HUD FMR
Air Quality Index
Lower = cleaner
Top State Income Tax
Top marginal rate
State Sales Tax
Statewide base rate
Median Age
Years
✓ = better value · Sources: Census ACS, BEA, HUD Fair Market Rents, EPA AirNow, Tax Foundation
Renters will find significantly cheaper housing in Kansas City — median rent of $1,123/mo versus $1,729/mo in Austin, a 35% difference. Home buyers face a steeper market in Austin: the median home is $555,300 versus $167,400 in Kansas City — 70% more expensive.
Metric
Austin
Kansas City
Software Developer
Registered Nurse
Elementary Teacher
Electrician
Accountant
Higher wage highlighted · BLS OEWS 2023 (metro-level data)
State tax data is not yet available for these cities.
Austin
Income tax: N/A
Sales tax: N/A
Kansas City
Income tax: N/A
Sales tax: N/A
Kansas City has cleaner air on average: 57.0 AQI (Moderate) compared to 65.0 AQI (Moderate) in the other city. Lower AQI means cleaner, healthier air.
Pick Kansas City if you prioritize lower overall cost of living (index 93.2 vs 98.3).
Pick Austin if you prioritize higher median household income ($93,658/yr).
Pick Kansas City if you prioritize cheaper rent ($1,123/mo median).
Pick Kansas City if you prioritize cleaner air quality (avg AQI 57.0).
Kansas City is cheaper overall, with a cost of living index of 93.2 versus 98.3 (US average = 100). That means prices run about 5% lower in Kansas City.
Median rent is $1,729/mo in Austin, TX and $1,123/mo in Kansas City, KS. Kansas City, KS has the lower rent by about 35%.
Median household income is $93,658 in Austin, TX and $62,401 in Kansas City, KS. Austin, TX has the higher median income. Note that BLS occupational wages in the table above show wages for specific jobs.
Kansas City, KS has better air quality on average: 57.0 AQI versus 65.0 AQI. Both are EPA AirNow annual averages; lower is better.
State tax data is not yet available for one or both cities.
To maintain the same purchasing power, a salary of $100,000 in Austin, TX is equivalent to roughly $94,838 in Kansas City, KS (using the BEA Regional Price Parity ratio). Use the salary calculator above for any income amount.
Data last updated: June 1, 2026 · Sources: US Census ACS, BEA RPP, BLS OEWS, HUD FMR, EPA AirNow, Tax Foundation · Methodology