Anonymous wrote:My attempt to talk you out of it:
Denver is all about quality of life, and DC is just ... not. It can be a tough/stressful place to live unless everything lines up just right. My low point was flipping off a garbage truck that drove around me while I waited for the light to turn red. I was like, who have I become??? But some people make it work and love being around so much action (money, power, politics, culture). I just prefer a more laid back existence.
I lived in Denver in the early 2000s, and I know it’s changed—higher cost of living, more traffic, etc. Still, when I go back for work I always have such a nice time. I can breathe. People are less tense. I feel like I can freely move around.
Anonymous wrote:My attempt to talk you out of it:
Denver is all about quality of life, and DC is just ... not. It can be a tough/stressful place to live unless everything lines up just right. My low point was flipping off a garbage truck that drove around me while I waited for the light to turn red. I was like, who have I become??? But some people make it work and love being around so much action (money, power, politics, culture). I just prefer a more laid back existence.
I lived in Denver in the early 2000s, and I know it’s changed—higher cost of living, more traffic, etc. Still, when I go back for work I always have such a nice time. I can breathe. People are less tense. I feel like I can freely move around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30% increase isn't enough unless you're already pulling down $120K+ in Denver.
And even then, your standards of living will need some adjustment downward. Quite a bit in fact, because you can't get the kind of home in the DC area you can get in Denver for even 3x the money.
Making 180k base now. What kind of homes are you talking about though?
Well, an equivalent $300,000 home in Denver will cost you more than $900,000 here. And I know what $300k gets you in Denver. Here $300k gets you a townhouse in a sketchy neighborhood in MD or VA, with a one hour+ commute. Or it will get you a one BR condo in a cheaper, older building in the city.
Have you been there in this decade? My frirnd just sold his rundown 1000 square foot house in a transitioning part of Englewood with terrible schools for $410k.
OP should be fine. The question is: why would you want to move to DC from Denver?
agree with this.
OP here. Job prospects which comes with more hours of course. Please feel free to talk me out of it!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30% increase isn't enough unless you're already pulling down $120K+ in Denver.
And even then, your standards of living will need some adjustment downward. Quite a bit in fact, because you can't get the kind of home in the DC area you can get in Denver for even 3x the money.
Making 180k base now. What kind of homes are you talking about though?
Well, an equivalent $300,000 home in Denver will cost you more than $900,000 here. And I know what $300k gets you in Denver. Here $300k gets you a townhouse in a sketchy neighborhood in MD or VA, with a one hour+ commute. Or it will get you a one BR condo in a cheaper, older building in the city.
Ignoring the factual inaccuracies of this post, OP, I would like to let you know that most of the suburbs of DC are GREAT and not sketchy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30% increase isn't enough unless you're already pulling down $120K+ in Denver.
And even then, your standards of living will need some adjustment downward. Quite a bit in fact, because you can't get the kind of home in the DC area you can get in Denver for even 3x the money.
Making 180k base now. What kind of homes are you talking about though?
Well, an equivalent $300,000 home in Denver will cost you more than $900,000 here. And I know what $300k gets you in Denver. Here $300k gets you a townhouse in a sketchy neighborhood in MD or VA, with a one hour+ commute. Or it will get you a one BR condo in a cheaper, older building in the city.