[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":34},["ShallowReactive",2],{"city-content-detroit":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"description":26,"extension":27,"meta":28,"navigation":29,"path":30,"seo":31,"stem":32,"__hash__":33},"cities\u002Fcities\u002Fdetroit.md","Cost of Living in Detroit",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":22},"minimark",[9,13,16,19],[10,11,12],"p",{},"Detroit has a cost of living index of 84, about 16% below the national average. The housing index is 60, well below the baseline. A one-bedroom apartment in Detroit rents for around $800 to $1,200 per month, and homes in the city can be purchased for $100,000 to $200,000 in many neighborhoods, a price range that is nearly impossible to find in any other major US city. The median household income is approximately $35,000, reflecting the city's decades-long economic challenges and population decline.",[10,14,15],{},"A $100,000 salary in Detroit is worth approximately $119,000 relative to the national average. Workers who earn salaries at or above the national median and choose to live in Detroit gain significant financial advantage. Remote workers, in particular, who earn salaries calibrated to higher-cost metro rates while living in Detroit can build savings or pay down debt at a rate that would be impossible elsewhere.",[10,17,18],{},"Michigan has a flat state income tax of 4.25%. Detroit adds a city income tax of 2.4% for residents and 1.2% for non-residents who work in the city. The combined burden is moderate. Property taxes in Detroit are actually high relative to assessed values, which is a legacy of the city's fiscal history and reduced service delivery. Effective property tax rates can run 3 to 5% of assessed value in some areas, though actual assessments are often below market value. Buyers should investigate the specific parcel's tax history before purchasing.",[10,20,21],{},"One practical observation: Detroit's low housing prices come with context. The city's population fell from 1.8 million in 1950 to around 620,000 today, and many neighborhoods have reduced services, longer emergency response times, and uneven maintenance of infrastructure. The metro area as a whole, including suburbs like Royal Oak, Ferndale, Dearborn, and Troy, is substantially more functional and carries higher housing costs to reflect that. Workers who want Detroit's financial advantages while accessing better infrastructure typically live in inner suburbs and commute into the city.",{"title":23,"searchDepth":24,"depth":24,"links":25},"",2,[],"What your salary is worth in Detroit compared to the US average","md",{},true,"\u002Fcities\u002Fdetroit",{"title":5,"description":26},"cities\u002Fdetroit","3bIE3zltd6AbVys-fuMhchwDGjY33QFzP2ckxn8er5M",1776796069941]