Salary Overview

Median Salary
$132,349
25th Percentile
$99,262
75th Percentile
$172,054

Tax Breakdown

Gross Salary:$132,349
Federal Tax:$24,806
State Tax (6.8%):$9,066
Local Tax (3.9%):$5,130
FICA (Social Security & Medicare):$10,125
Total Tax (37.1%):$49,127
Net Annual Salary:$83,222
Net Monthly Income:$6,935

Cost of Living Analysis

Cost of Living Index:181.3(100 = National Average)
Adjusted Salary (National COL):$73,000
Average Monthly Rent:$1,821
Estimated Monthly Expenses:$9,819
Purchasing Power:121.7

About New York

Population: 8,483,844
Median Home Price: $777,600
Sales Tax: 8.9%

About Accountant

Category: Finance
National Median: $73,000
Growth Rate: 7.0%
Education: Bachelor's degree in Accounting (CPA preferred)

What this data means in real life

The figures on this page estimate a typical base salary for a Accountant in New York. The number ($132,349) represents a median-style estimate adjusted for local cost-of-living and common career-level differences. Use it as a data-informed starting point when comparing offers or planning a move.

What this data does not capture

These estimates exclude company-specific pay bands, negotiated sign-on bonuses, equity grants, non-salary benefits, and irregular contract premiums. They also do not reflect personal circumstances such as household size, childcare needs, or medical expenses.

Who this is best for

This data is most useful for mid-career professionals and hiring teams who need a quick, comparable view of salary and purchasing power across metros. It is strongest for occupations with broad reporting and many local hires.

Who should avoid this move

If accepting the posted salary would reduce your adjusted purchasing power versus your current location—for example, if your current salary is higher than $73,000 or your family has high fixed costs—this move may not be suitable without additional compensation. Similarly, candidates with specialized compensation (equity, commission-heavy roles, or contractor rates) should not rely solely on these medians.

How to use this data in decisions

  1. Compare the adjusted salary ($132,349) with your current take-home and benefits.
  2. Check local costs on this page—housing, taxes, and typical living expenses—and add one-time moving costs.
  3. If the move reduces purchasing power, ask the employer for targeted adjustments (relocation support, higher base, or sign-on).
  4. Use this page as an initial benchmark, then validate current market demand and compensation bands with recent local job postings.