Cook County, IL is cheaper than Bergen County, NJ.
Moving to Bergen County, NJ is estimated to cost $8,885 more per year.
$50,000 in Cook County, IL is about $58,020 in Bergen County, NJ.
Housing increases by $3,012 per year. No measured category is cheaper in Bergen County, NJ.
Housing: $3,012 higher in Bergen County, NJ
Taxes: $1,554 higher in Bergen County, NJ
Childcare: about the same in both counties
Healthcare: $877 higher in Bergen County, NJ
Food: $184 higher in Bergen County, NJ
Transport: $2,264 higher in Bergen County, NJ
This estimate matches your purchasing power (equivalent salary) when moving from Cook County, IL to Bergen County, NJ.
* Living index is estimated as (estimated total cost / area median income) * 100. A living index above 100% means modeled costs exceed median income.
Moving from Cook County, IL to Bergen County, NJ is estimated to cost $8,885 more per year. To maintain similar purchasing power, a $50,000 salary in Cook County, IL would need to be about $58,020 in Bergen County, NJ. The biggest increase is housing, followed by transport.
This is a 16.04% increase in modeled annual costs. Housing is $3,012 per year higher (17.53%); Transport is $2,264 per year higher (22.47%).
Below we break down the annual categories behind the difference using Economic Policy Institute 2026 Family Budget data.
The following cards show the annual category differences that most affect the move to Bergen County, NJ.
$3,012 per year
HOUSING has the largest annual increase when moving to Bergen County, NJ.
No savings
No measured category is cheaper in Bergen County, NJ.
Numbers are average costs per section.
| Category | Difference | |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | 17.53% higher | |
| Food | 3.95% higher | |
| Transport | 22.47% higher | |
| Healthcare | 17.64% higher | |
| Other Costs | 14.63% higher | |
| Childcare | 0.00% higher | |
| Taxes | 13.25% higher |
In Bergen County, NJ, modeled annual costs are $64,284 compared with $55,399 in Cook County, IL.
Overall, annual costs are higher in Bergen County, NJ. The category breakdown above shows whether housing, taxes, transportation, healthcare, food, childcare, or other necessities are driving the increase.
In this case Bergen County, NJ and Cook County, IL are both metropolitan locations.
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