Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had the opportunity to move to the Bay Area (around silicon valley) for an increase in longer term work opportunities, but would need to leave family help (one set of grandparents) behind, would you do it?
A few stats:
2 kids, school age
Spouse can move states with no impact on career, bay area could be a net benefit
Comp would get adjusted for new location, but no immediate promotion for the move. However, long term opportunities exist which don't in VA
Pros:
-Better outdoors lifestyle
-Better career opportunities
-Better weather
Cons:
-Leaving family and friends
-Higher housing costs and taxes
What did I miss? What would you do?
TIA
Hey OP, we are in a similar situation as you and decided to make the move to Silicon Valley for better career trajectories. I think it’s a net positive, especially with your income. We have family in CA, and no one here in DMV so that played into our calculus. Leaving friends will be hard but that comes with any move. Bay Area is, in my opinion, one of the most beautiful areas of the country, especially if you enjoy being outdoors as a family.
Our HHI is a little lower than yours, so private will not be an option. What area in the Penninsula are you looking at? We are trying to find an area with good publics but nothing too pressure cooker. Best of luck, curious where you land!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. One more stat - $900k HHI
I was going to say no ... but at that HHI yes I might. You will need to plan on private school, high food and fuel costs, smaller house for the money. Eldercare issues / travel costs related to the grandparents.
And yes, fire (including days of smoke from far away fires) and earthquake insurance or self insurance: when looking for housing, think about evacuation routes, fire-resistant construction, and also how reliable is your water source because drought - which has always been a consideration - is going to turn into a political issue.
I'm from the Bay Area and my family is there, so I have personal reasons to live there - but I live in VA, instead, because it offers me a better quality of life for my salary, which is much lower than yours. The fires scare me and the Bay Area has become more crowded, rich, and pretentious than when I was a kid there. You will need to keep an eye on your kids' mental health because their peers will be intense.
Also, if you move there and still call it Cali, they throw you back over the border to Nevada. That's just the rules.
OP here - hilarious on the Cali point, I deserved that.
Do you think the pressure cooker environment for kids is more than in the DMV? I worry about my kids here with the high amounts of wealth they are exposed to and high pressure at school.
Do you think you'll ever go back to the Bay Area?
Anonymous wrote:If you had the opportunity to move to the Bay Area (around silicon valley) for an increase in longer term work opportunities, but would need to leave family help (one set of grandparents) behind, would you do it?
A few stats:
2 kids, school age
Spouse can move states with no impact on career, bay area could be a net benefit
Comp would get adjusted for new location, but no immediate promotion for the move. However, long term opportunities exist which don't in VA
Pros:
-Better outdoors lifestyle
-Better career opportunities
-Better weather
Cons:
-Leaving family and friends
-Higher housing costs and taxes
What did I miss? What would you do?
TIA
Anonymous wrote:If you had the opportunity to move to the Bay Area (around silicon valley) for an increase in longer term work opportunities, but would need to leave family help (one set of grandparents) behind, would you do it?
A few stats:
2 kids, school age
Spouse can move states with no impact on career, bay area could be a net benefit
Comp would get adjusted for new location, but no immediate promotion for the move. However, long term opportunities exist which don't in VA
Pros:
-Better outdoors lifestyle
-Better career opportunities
-Better weather
Cons:
-Leaving family and friends
-Higher housing costs and taxes
What did I miss? What would you do?
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. One more stat - $900k HHI
I was going to say no ... but at that HHI yes I might. You will need to plan on private school, high food and fuel costs, smaller house for the money. Eldercare issues / travel costs related to the grandparents.
And yes, fire (including days of smoke from far away fires) and earthquake insurance or self insurance: when looking for housing, think about evacuation routes, fire-resistant construction, and also how reliable is your water source because drought - which has always been a consideration - is going to turn into a political issue.
I'm from the Bay Area and my family is there, so I have personal reasons to live there - but I live in VA, instead, because it offers me a better quality of life for my salary, which is much lower than yours. The fires scare me and the Bay Area has become more crowded, rich, and pretentious than when I was a kid there. You will need to keep an eye on your kids' mental health because their peers will be intense.
Also, if you move there and still call it Cali, they throw you back over the border to Nevada. That's just the rules.
Anonymous wrote:I just did this same thing but to Seattle. We love it! Expensive but make more to offset. Net benefits to all in the family.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. One more stat - $900k HHI
Anonymous wrote:If you had the opportunity to move to the Bay Area (around silicon valley) for an increase in longer term work opportunities, but would need to leave family help (one set of grandparents) behind, would you do it?
A few stats:
2 kids, school age
Spouse can move states with no impact on career, bay area could be a net benefit
Comp would get adjusted for new location, but no immediate promotion for the move. However, long term opportunities exist which don't in VA
Pros:
-Better outdoors lifestyle
-Better career opportunities
-Better weather
Cons:
-Leaving family and friends
-Higher housing costs and taxes
What did I miss? What would you do?
TIA