
Cost of Living in Washington State 2026: Seattle Tech Premium and Eastside Alternatives
Washington State’s cost of living is dominated by Seattle’s tech-driven housing market — one of the most expensive in the United States, where Amazon and Microsoft employment and the tech sector they anchor have created a demand environment that has driven median home prices to levels once associated only with San Francisco and New York. The state’s most cited financial advantage — no state income tax — is genuine and significant for high earners, but it is largely offset (and sometimes exceeded) by property taxes, the Business and Occupation (B&O) tax structure, and the cost of housing that makes Washington’s real estate among the most expensive in the nation. The honest calculation requires comparing the full tax and cost picture, not just the zero state income tax line. East of the Cascades, in communities like Spokane, Tri-Cities, and Yakima, the cost picture changes dramatically — affordable housing, lower cost of living, and the same no-income-tax benefit in a much more accessible market.
Washington Cost at a Glance 2026
- State income tax: None (Washington has no personal income tax)
- Seattle metro median home price: $780,000–$920,000
- Eastside (Bellevue/Kirkland/Redmond) median: $950,000–$1.2M
- Spokane median: $310,000–$380,000
- Tri-Cities median: $330,000–$400,000
- Sales tax: 6.5% state + local; Seattle total 10.25% — among the highest in the country
- Property tax effective rate: ~0.93%
The No-Income-Tax Calculation
Washington’s absence of a personal income tax is the state’s most frequently cited financial advantage for tech workers earning Seattle-level salaries. The actual savings depend heavily on your income level and previous state of residence:
- At $150,000 income: Moving from California saves approximately $10,000–$14,000 annually (California 9.3%–10.3% rate); moving from Oregon saves approximately $12,000 (Oregon 9% rate)
- At $300,000 income: California savings of $30,000–$40,000 annually; Oregon savings of approximately $27,000
- The offset: Washington’s sales tax (10.25% in Seattle) is among the highest in the country; property taxes on a $900,000 home run approximately $8,400/year; the B&O tax applies to self-employment and business income in ways that affect contractors and small business owners significantly
- Capital gains: Washington passed a 7% capital gains tax in 2021 (effective 2022) on long-term capital gains above $250,000 — reducing (but not eliminating) the no-income-tax advantage for equity-heavy tech workers
Seattle Neighborhoods: The Price Gradient
Seattle’s neighborhood price hierarchy reflects the city’s topography, transit access, and proximity to major employers:
- Capitol Hill / First Hill: Dense, walkable, transit-rich; condos $550,000–$800,000; single-family $850,000–$1.2M; the most urban Seattle residential experience
- Fremont / Wallingford: The “Center of the Universe” — craftsman homes, walkable commercial districts, tech employer proximity; $850,000–$1.2M
- Queen Anne / Magnolia: Views, detached homes, family-oriented; $1M–$1.5M+
- South Seattle (Columbia City, Beacon Hill, Rainier Valley): Light rail access, more affordable; $600,000–$800,000; the fastest appreciating neighborhoods in Seattle
Eastside: Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond
The Eastside cities across Lake Washington from Seattle — Bellevue, Kirkland, and Redmond (Microsoft’s campus) — have developed into a distinct urban core with housing prices that now exceed Seattle’s in many neighborhoods. Bellevue’s downtown has emerged as a genuine urban center (Lincoln Square, the Bravern, a growing restaurant and retail scene) with prices of $950,000–$1.2M+ for single-family homes and $600,000–$850,000 for condominiums. Redmond’s proximity to Microsoft and the broader tech corridor drives the market; Kirkland’s Lake Washington waterfront commands premiums of $1.5M+ for lakefront properties. For tech workers at Eastside employers, the premium for Eastside residence (avoiding the SR-520 or I-90 floating bridge commute) is financially significant.
Spokane: Eastern Washington Value
Spokane, Washington’s second-largest city (230,000 residents) and the commercial hub of the Inland Northwest, provides the most compelling value proposition in Washington State for households not tied to Puget Sound employment. Median home prices of $310,000–$380,000 deliver genuine affordability; Gonzaga University’s Spokane campus creates the university-town cultural infrastructure that sustains an active restaurant and arts scene; and the Spokane River’s Riverfront Park (site of the 1974 World’s Fair) provides urban outdoor recreation in the heart of the city. The surrounding Palouse and the Idaho border’s Coeur d’Alene area extend the outdoor recreation access substantially.
Groceries, Utilities, and Daily Costs
Washington State’s daily living costs reflect the tech-premium urban market. Grocery prices in Seattle run 12–18% above the national average — driven by the high labor costs, real estate costs, and the overall wage premium of the Seattle market. The eastern side of the state runs much closer to national averages for food and daily purchases. Utility costs in western Washington are a relative bright spot: electricity from Puget Sound Energy and Seattle City Light benefits from hydroelectric power on the Columbia and Snake Rivers, averaging 10–12 cents per kilowatt-hour — below national averages and dramatically below California and New England rates. Heating costs are moderate (Seattle’s mild marine climate rarely requires extended cold-weather heating), but home cooling is not standard in older Seattle housing stock, creating real discomfort during the 90°F+ heat events that now occur several times per summer. Internet access is well-served throughout the metro; Comcast, CenturyLink (Lumen), and fiber providers cover most urban and suburban addresses with competitive gigabit service.
Washington vs. Oregon: The Border Comparison
Washington and Oregon are the two no-sales-tax / no-income-tax mirror states of the Pacific Northwest, but the comparison is not as clean as that summary implies. Washington has no income tax but charges a 10.25% sales tax in Seattle; Oregon has no sales tax but charges income tax up to 9.9%. For high earners, Washington wins decisively: a $200,000 earner saves $18,000+ in income taxes over Oregon. For moderate earners who spend a high percentage of income on taxable goods, the Oregon no-sales-tax advantage narrows the gap considerably. On housing, Portland’s metro is meaningfully more affordable than Seattle’s (Portland medians of $450,000–$550,000 vs Seattle’s $780,000–$920,000) — a significant variable for households where employment is portable between the two metros. The practical summary: tech workers earning Seattle salaries maximize their financial position in Washington; remote workers or retirees with lower taxable income and flexibility may find Oregon’s overall cost-quality balance competitive.



