Anonymous wrote:As a person of color, I always get envious of this thread, I don't feel like I can just take my kids and move to a random non diverse city. It is privilege no having to think about how your kids or family will fit in. Enjoy
Anonymous wrote:1) Pittsburgh suburb
2) HHI stays about the same, maybe a little less. Is around 300k maybe would have been 350k in DC
I love my big 4 bedroom home with 2 car garage and new kitchen in a good public school district in a private neighborhood that cost 370,000.
Daycare was half of what it was in DMV, which i didn't expect. Dining out is way less too.
Anonymous wrote:Daycare in the DMV is insane.
Hhi in dc was about 200k
Hhi in new city is about 300k
South west
Taxes are lower and we live in a great house with a 15 minute commute. Being in a newer house where things are breaking or falling apart is a huge stress reliever. Our daycare bill is half of what it was in dc. Our friends from our 20s in DC all left or like turned into anxious aholes.
Anonymous wrote:As a person of color, I always get envious of this thread, I don't feel like I can just take my kids and move to a random non diverse city. It is privilege no having to think about how your kids or family will fit in. Enjoy
Anonymous wrote:We are moving to Colorado. It will prob be the same cost of living, but better overall lifestyle. Taking our jobs with us. Making around $350k
Anonymous wrote:For BIPOCs looking for lower COL while not decamping to Deliverance country, you need to look at the big cities of the South. Atlanta, Houston, New Orleans, Tampa, etc. Don't be afraid of being in a red state...the cities are generally islands of blue. And in the case of Atlanta and Houston, you'll have even better connectivity (airports) to the rest of the world than we have in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a person of color, I always get envious of this thread, I don't feel like I can just take my kids and move to a random non diverse city. It is privilege no having to think about how your kids or family will fit in. Enjoy
I don't recommend moving to a "random non diverse city." But that isn't what this thread is about. It is about finding a place outside of the DMV that is a better place to live for you and your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are a lot of things about the DMV that not only cost more, but are more stressful. Services in this area are weirdly limited in ways that you don't run into in other cities, partly because of how many people abandoned the city for the suburbs in the 80s and 90s. DC never really built up its service infrastructure when people started moving back in. We got lots more bars and restaurants, but not necessarily more daycares, dentists, and auto body shops.
I'm a cheerleader for DC and have no plans to leave, but OMG this so much. This is my biggest complaint about the city, more so that HCOL (dare we say VHCOL?) and traffic. It's so freaking hard to get basic services done. Medical and dental offices don't accept new patients. My dog groomer schedules appointments two months out. You can't just walk into a chain salon and get a haircut for $20. Reliable handymen are impossible to find unless you happen to know someone through your social circle. Any type of home repair? Get three estimates? Bwahahaha. Go with the first company that actually agrees to do the job and then also shows up. I'm sure part of this is that having such a high cost of living drives out the working class that would provide the home / auto / cosmetic services we want without a waiting list.
On the other end of the scale, we don't have much accessibility to a lot of the quirky/cool things other cities have. Much smaller cities have studios for circus arts. There's currently a thread on Reddit about the impossibility of signing up for a pottery class in DC. I remember in the before times I wanted to take cooking lessons, and the local options were both exorbitantly priced and sold out.
I love restaurants as much as the next person and partake in them freely. (I'm one of those weirdos whose spending actually increased during the pandemic because of frequent takeout and extra booze.) But I don't understand why a metro area with such a vibrant and diverse population has very little to offer in terms of vibrant and diverse amenities.
Agree. We just had to get our oil changed and it was a massive hassle.
Come to the suburbs! Lorton Workhouse offers pottery and cooking classes. I'm taking one now. $250 for a nine-week class that is 2.5 hours one evening a week. Seems reasonable to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Moving to upstate NY. Keeping my remote job, spouse will have to look for something new. House price much lower than here but high property taxes,
I moved to Upstate NY from the DC area. It's so much better. Less stress, beautiful outdoors, and better schools. The people who talk about 6 months of winter are either exaggerating or climate change has made a massive difference since they last lived here. (I grew up in an area that is much hotter and drier than when I was a kid, so I'm not just being snarky.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are a lot of things about the DMV that not only cost more, but are more stressful. Services in this area are weirdly limited in ways that you don't run into in other cities, partly because of how many people abandoned the city for the suburbs in the 80s and 90s. DC never really built up its service infrastructure when people started moving back in. We got lots more bars and restaurants, but not necessarily more daycares, dentists, and auto body shops.
I'm a cheerleader for DC and have no plans to leave, but OMG this so much. This is my biggest complaint about the city, more so that HCOL (dare we say VHCOL?) and traffic. It's so freaking hard to get basic services done. Medical and dental offices don't accept new patients. My dog groomer schedules appointments two months out. You can't just walk into a chain salon and get a haircut for $20. Reliable handymen are impossible to find unless you happen to know someone through your social circle. Any type of home repair? Get three estimates? Bwahahaha. Go with the first company that actually agrees to do the job and then also shows up. I'm sure part of this is that having such a high cost of living drives out the working class that would provide the home / auto / cosmetic services we want without a waiting list.
On the other end of the scale, we don't have much accessibility to a lot of the quirky/cool things other cities have. Much smaller cities have studios for circus arts. There's currently a thread on Reddit about the impossibility of signing up for a pottery class in DC. I remember in the before times I wanted to take cooking lessons, and the local options were both exorbitantly priced and sold out.
I love restaurants as much as the next person and partake in them freely. (I'm one of those weirdos whose spending actually increased during the pandemic because of frequent takeout and extra booze.) But I don't understand why a metro area with such a vibrant and diverse population has very little to offer in terms of vibrant and diverse amenities.
Agree. We just had to get our oil changed and it was a massive hassle.
Come to the suburbs! Lorton Workhouse offers pottery and cooking classes. I'm taking one now. $250 for a nine-week class that is 2.5 hours one evening a week. Seems reasonable to me.
Anonymous wrote:As a person of color, I always get envious of this thread, I don't feel like I can just take my kids and move to a random non diverse city. It is privilege no having to think about how your kids or family will fit in. Enjoy