Can You Afford to Live in Kenosha on $200,000?

Yes, Comfortably

Yes - $200K provides a comfortable lifestyle in Kenosha with room to save.

Direct Answer

On $200K in Kenosha, WI, this budget is comfortable. Estimated take-home pay is $12,333/mo, core expenses are $3,185/mo, and the remaining buffer is $9,148/mo.

Rent takes 10% of after-tax income and essential expenses take 26%. The result is strongest when housing, insurance, and transportation are checked together instead of judging rent alone.

Modeled affordability estimateBLS, HUD, ACS inputsLast verified May 2026
Monthly After Tax
$12,333
Total Expenses
$3,185
Remaining
$9,148
Savings Rate
74%

Monthly Budget Breakdown

ExpenseMonthly Cost% of IncomeShare
Rent (1BR avg)$1,18610%
Groceries$4824%
Utilities$2872%
Transportation$4143%
Car Insurance$1591%
Health Insurance$6575%
Total Expenses$3,18526%
Remaining (Savings + Discretionary)$9,14874%

What Changes the Answer Most?

Rent burden
10%

Housing stays near the normal affordability range for this salary.

Essential spend
26%

$3,185/mo goes to rent, groceries, utilities, transportation, car insurance, and health insurance.

Tax reserve
$4,334

Estimated monthly federal and WI tax reserve before local payroll details.

Local cost index
92/100

Kenosha is close to the national baseline, so housing and taxes decide most of the outcome.

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Decision Checklist Before Moving to Kenosha on $200K

  1. Keep rent near $1,186/mo or lower to preserve the 74% buffer.
  2. Set an automatic savings transfer before upgrading car, dining, or entertainment spending.
  3. Compare neighborhoods against commute costs before paying a premium for central rent.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the budget calculated?

We start with the gross salary ($200,000), subtract estimated federal and WI state taxes (effective rate ~26%), then allocate expenses based on BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey proportions adjusted by Kenosha's cost-of-living index (92).

What's not included in the budget?

This budget covers major fixed expenses: rent, groceries, utilities, transportation, car insurance, and health insurance. It does NOT include: dining out, entertainment, clothing, student loans, childcare, savings contributions, or other discretionary spending. The "remaining" amount covers all of these.

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