Is $200,000 Enough in Jacksonville?

Florida's Affordable Big City

Jacksonville offers big city amenities with small city prices. No state income tax makes it attractive for savers.

Where Goes Your Money?
Net Pay$148,935
Federal Tax$37,247
FICA (SS+Med)$13,818

Effective Tax Rate

25.5%

The Tax Reality

In Jacksonville, you will keep $12,411/mo after taxes. You benefit from having NO state income tax here!

Lifestyle & Salary AdjusterDefaults
$
Estimated Monthly Net$12,411
Tax Rate

26% (Fed + Jacksonville State)

TightBalancedWealthy

Thriving (Score: 100)

Excellent

You have plenty of room for savings and fun!

Monthly Costs for Jacksonville

$
$
$
$

Needs Ratio

16%

Basics vs Net Income.
Goal: <50%

Leftover / Mo

$10,156

For Savings, Debts, Fun.
Try to invest this!

What do these numbers mean?

  • Needs Ratio: Percentage of your net pay going to essentials. Lower is better.
  • Leftover: Your "Freedom Money". This is what you have for lifestyle, travel, and building wealth.

Want to see how other salaries compare?Scroll Down for Benchmarks & City Comparisons

*Defaults based on local averages (Jan 2026). Adjust inputs to match your lifestyle.

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Executive Summary

With a salary of $200,000, you are well-positioned to thrive in Jacksonville. One major advantage is Jacksonville's location in a **no-state-income-tax** zone, which effectively boosts your purchasing power by 4-8% compared to similar cities. Housing is very affordable at this income level, consuming just 11.3% of your net payโ€”well below the recommended 30% limit. This leaves you with a healthy **$10,366** surplus each month for investing, travel, or aggressive savings.

Put that surplus to work

Don't let inflation eat your savings. Get 5.00% APY on your cash right now.

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Plan Your Next Move

The Bottom Line

At this lifestyle, $200,000 in Jacksonville supports a comfortable life with significant room for savings and leisure. You are well-positioned for long-term wealth building.

Decision Score: 303/100 (Higher is more comfortable)

Data Sources: Tax data sourced from IRS Publication 15-T (2025). Cost of Living estimates derived from BLS and Census averages (Jan 2026).

Content on this site is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Results are estimates and may vary by neighborhood. Consult a CPA for your specific situation.