Skip to content
AffordMap
COL-adjusted ranking

Best Cities for Education Teachers, Postsecondarys by Take-Home Pay

The cities that pay Education Teachers, Postsecondarys the most on paper aren't usually the best deals once rent and prices are factored in. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario ranks first with a COL-adjusted equivalent of $116,413/year, better purchasing power than San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad's higher nominal pay of $129,100. The table below uses BLS OEWS May 2025 salary data and BEA Regional Price Parities.

Highest nominal pay

#1 San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad$129,100
#2 Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario$123,910
#3 San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara$121,520

Best purchasing power

#1 Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario$116,413
#2 San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad$115,381
#3 Chattanooga$113,481

Top 25 metros by purchasing power

Ranked by COL-adjusted salary. Metros with fewer than 100 employed education teachers, postsecondarys excluded.

Rank
Metro
Nominal
COL-adj.
#1
$123,910
$116,413
#2
$129,100
$115,381
#3
Chattanooga
16% rent burden
$103,790
$113,481
#4
$121,520
$110,053
#5
Wilmington
16% rent burden
$106,070
$110,008
#6
College Station-Bryan
15% rent burden
$96,960
$106,608
#7
Ann Arbor
19% rent burden
$105,640
$104,718
#8
$105,730
$93,097
#9
Lansing-East Lansing
18% rent burden
$86,290
$90,841
#10
Ithaca
23% rent burden
$92,870
$89,886
#11
Grand Forks
17% rent burden
$77,540
$89,476
#12
New Orleans-Metairie
19% rent burden
$82,700
$89,309
#13
$76,460
$89,021
#14
$90,940
$88,506
#15
Columbia
18% rent burden
$78,160
$87,388
#16
Lincoln
17% rent burden
$79,340
$86,635
#17
Reading
23% rent burden
$83,780
$86,318
#18
Knoxville
23% rent burden
$78,330
$84,617
#19
Beaumont-Port Arthur
17% rent burden
$76,110
$84,520
#20
Amarillo
17% rent burden
$77,400
$84,295
#21
Columbia
19% rent burden
$78,880
$84,220
#22
$83,400
$83,151
#23
Rochester
23% rent burden
$80,560
$83,026
#24
Buffalo-Cheektowaga
20% rent burden
$79,560
$83,013
#25
Omaha
22% rent burden
$75,920
$82,603

COL-adjusted = nominal salary divided by (BEA RPP divided by 100). Rent burden = annual 2BR FMR as % of nominal salary. Sources: BLS OEWS May 2025, BEA Regional Price Parities, HUD Fair Market Rents.

Common questions

What does "COL-adjusted pay" mean for Education Teachers, Postsecondarys?

COL-adjusted pay divides the BLS median salary by the BEA Regional Price Parity index (100 = national average). A salary of $129,100 in a city with RPP 120 has the same purchasing power as $107,583 at national average prices.

Why doesn't New York or San Francisco top this list?

Both cities pay above-average salaries, but rent and everyday costs eat most of that premium. A education teachers, postsecondary in New York might earn 30% more but pay 60-80% more in rent. The net result is often less purchasing power than mid-cost metros.

How is purchasing power calculated?

Purchasing power equals nominal median salary divided by (BEA RPP divided by 100). BEA's Regional Price Parities measure relative price levels across metro areas, updated annually from the National Income and Product Accounts.

What's the most affordable metro for Education Teachers, Postsecondarys?

College Station-Bryan has one of the lowest rent burdens for Education Teachers, Postsecondarys in this dataset. HUD FMR for a 2-bedroom is $1,186/month, with a median salary of $96,960.

Where do Education Teachers, Postsecondarys get paid the most in nominal terms?

San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad pays the highest nominal median salary at $129,100/year, per BLS OEWS May 2025. But check the COL-adjusted column before accepting any relocation offer.

National salary breakdown for Education Teachers, PostsecondarysView →How to become a education teachers, postsecondaryGuide →Compare two cities side by sideCompare →