Landscape view of Connecticut

Living on $200k in Connecticut

State salary scenario for $200,000 across cities in Connecticut.

This scenario page shows how a $200,000 salary typically performs across cities in Connecticut, with rent pressure first and deeper links after.

Is $200,000 enough in Connecticut?

Torrington is the current best match in Connecticut for this salary, with rent around 6.28% of gross income and a strong purchasing power outcome in our model.

Useful for relocation shortlists and deciding which city pages to open next.

For 200,000/yr in Connecticut, Torrington is the lowest-rent-burden match in our dataset. Rent is about 6.28% of gross, and Rent (housing) is the biggest monthly cost driver. In this area (mid-range), the model’s rent math puts housing in a “Comfortable” bucket: rent looks comparatively manageable and rent (housing) is the main lever in the estimates.

Best match city
Torrington, CT
Take-home (est.)
10,952.97/mo
Rent share of gross
6.28%
Lifestyle band
Strong purchasing power

Cost-of-living tier: moderate

What drives the budget here?

This area is generally mid-range based on a cost-of-living index of 100 (U.S. average = 100). Typical rent-to-gross is in the Comfortable range (using the page’s rent and income inputs).

In the site’s estimated monthly breakdown, the largest category is Rent (housing) (1,046/mo), so that’s the biggest lever for moving the overall budget up or down.

Practical next steps

  • Rent looks comparatively manageable for the typical household. Your biggest wins usually come from planning for the non-housing categories (utilities, groceries, etc.) so totals stay predictable.
  • State income tax is on the higher side in this state (6.99%). That reduces take-home pay, so “affordable” decisions should be based on net income, not just gross.
  • Because the required income is above the local median, you’ll usually feel better if you can either increase gross income or target rent closer to the guideline.

Cities in Connecticut (rent burden on $200k, lowest first)

Start with the best-fit cities below, then open individual city scenario pages for details.

  • TorringtonStrong purchasing power, rent 6.28% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • WaterburyStrong purchasing power, rent 6.73% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • East HartfordStrong purchasing power, rent 6.75% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • New BritainStrong purchasing power, rent 6.77% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • NorwichStrong purchasing power, rent 6.86% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • HartfordStrong purchasing power, rent 6.96% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • MeridenStrong purchasing power, rent 7.09% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • New LondonStrong purchasing power, rent 7.43% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • WethersfieldStrong purchasing power, rent 7.43% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • BristolStrong purchasing power, rent 7.44% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • Naugatuck boroughStrong purchasing power, rent 7.46% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • ManchesterStrong purchasing power, rent 7.73% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • West HavenStrong purchasing power, rent 7.92% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • MiddletownStrong purchasing power, rent 7.93% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home
  • BridgeportStrong purchasing power, rent 8.01% of gross, ~$10,952.97/mo take-home