City Comparison
Los Angeles vs Phoenix
Take-home pay, tax burden, and cost of living side-by-side. 2026 tax brackets.
California
Los Angeles
- Net on $110,000
- $78,971
- Effective rate
- 28.2%
- COL index
- 149
- Buying power
- $53,000
Arizona
Phoenix
- Net on $110,000
- $83,021
- Effective rate
- 24.5%
- COL index
- 107
- Buying power
- $77,590
On a $110,000 salary, the raw take-home gap is $4,050, but once you adjust for cost of living the effective buying-power gap is $24,589. To match Los Angeles's lifestyle at $110,000, you'd need to earn roughly $75,139 in Phoenix.
Comparison at different salary levels
Single filer, biweekly pay, standard deduction. Local tax applied where relevant.
| Gross salary | Los Angeles net | Phoenix net | Equivalent in Phoenix |
|---|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | $47,971 | $48,749 | $42,400 |
| $85,000 | $63,708 | $66,059 | $58,868 |
| $110,000 | $78,971 | $83,021 | $75,139 |
| $150,000 | $102,758 | $109,528 | $101,060 |
"Equivalent in Phoenix" = the gross salary you'd need to earn in Phoenix to match the after-tax, after-COL buying power of the left-column salary in Los Angeles.
See individual city breakdowns
Frequently asked questions
Is it cheaper to live in Los Angeles or Phoenix? ▾
Phoenix is significantly cheaper — COL index of 107 vs 149 (US average = 100). That gap comes mostly from housing; groceries and utilities usually differ by less than the headline COL number suggests.
If I earn $110,000 in Los Angeles, what do I need in Phoenix to match? ▾
To match the same after-tax buying power you'd get from $110,000 in Los Angeles, you'd need to earn about $75,139 gross in Phoenix. That accounts for both the tax difference and the cost-of-living gap.
Which city has lower taxes on a $110,000 salary? ▾
At $110,000, Los Angeles has an effective total tax rate of 28.2% vs 24.5% in Phoenix. That works out to a tax difference of about $4,050 per year.
Does the 'cheaper' city actually leave you better off? ▾
Not always. Raw net pay matters, but so does what that money buys. When we adjust for cost of living, Phoenix leaves you with about $77,590 of equivalent buying power at $110,000 — compared to $53,000 in the other.