Columbus vs Tuscaloosa
Metro-area medians — Columbus, GA-AL Metro Area vs Tuscaloosa, AL Metro Area — not the cities proper.
Tuscaloosa comes out ahead, winning 5 of the 7 clearly-decided measures.
Columbus and Tuscaloosa cost about the same to live in, but Tuscaloosa households earn about 4% more. Adjusted for local prices, a typical paycheck stretches further in Tuscaloosa.
For your salary & household
Enter your pay and household size to see what it's really worth here — the numbers update live and the link stays shareable.
On $75,000 for just you, Tuscaloosa leaves you about $835/yr better off after tax and local prices.
Take-home estimates a single filer taking the standard deduction (2025 federal brackets, FICA, and state income tax) and isn't tax advice. “Real value” rebases take-home to average U.S. prices using the BEA cost-of-living index; the per-person figure uses the OECD square-root equivalence scale.
Choose Tuscaloosa for
- + Cost-adjusted income (pay's real value)
- + Median household income
- + Median rent
- + Bachelor's degree or higher
- + Air quality (median AQI)
Columbus vs Tuscaloosa — frequently asked
- Is Columbus cheaper than Tuscaloosa?
- They are about even — the overall cost of living in the Columbus and Tuscaloosa metros is within 3% of each other (BEA Regional Price Parities), so neither is meaningfully cheaper.
- Which has higher household income, Columbus or Tuscaloosa?
- Tuscaloosa has the higher median household income — $62,280 versus $60,100 (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS), about 4% more.
- Does a paycheck go further in Columbus or Tuscaloosa?
- A paycheck stretches further in Tuscaloosa. Adjusted for local prices, the median income is worth $70,997 there versus $67,304 in Columbus.
- Which has cheaper rent, Columbus or Tuscaloosa?
- Tuscaloosa has cheaper rent — a median of $1,042/mo versus $1,143/mo (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS).