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Mortgage & Home Calculators for Wyoming Residents

Free mortgage & home calculators customized for Wyoming (WY) residents. Pre-filled with local tax rates, property values, and cost-of-living data for 2026.

Written by Jere Salmisto·Reviewed by CalcFi Editorial·Last reviewed 2026-04-19·Methodology

Income Tax Rate

None

No state income tax

Property Tax Rate

0.61%

National avg: 1.07%

Median Home (ZHVI)

$340,000

Nat'l avg: $420,000

Cost of Living

91.6

8.4% below avg

Why Wyoming Matters for Mortgage & Home Planning

Wyoming's housing market is anchored by a $340,000 median home value (Zillow ZHVI) and 0.61% property-tax effective rate. A buyer putting 20% down on the median home faces an estimated $2,153/month PITI at the 6.30% PMMS 30-year fixed rate. With no state income tax, there is no state-level mortgage-interest complication. Median household income is $72,060.[1][2]

Local context: Wyoming

Housing economics in Wyoming. The median home value runs 5.0% below the U.S. baseline for Wyoming is $340,000 per Zillow's home-value index. Effective property tax sits at 0.61% of assessed value, below the 0.99% national average tracked by the Tax Foundation. Lenders in Wyoming have quoted 6.30% on the 30-year fixed product over the trailing four-week window per Freddie Mac PMMS — the prevailing posted rate before any borrower-specific lock-ins.

Income and tax climate. Median household income in Wyoming reaches $72,060 per the ACS five-year vintage, trailing the $78,538 U.S. median. Wyoming's top marginal state income tax bracket lands at 0.00% — one of nine states that levies no broad-based income tax, shifting the revenue burden onto sales, property, and severance levies. State sales tax sits at 4.00% before local add-ons; combined rates in metro areas frequently push 1-3 percentage points higher. BEA's Regional Price Parity scores Wyoming at 91.6 (national = 100), meaning a dollar in Wyoming buys 109¢ — more goods and services than the same dollar nationally.

How Wyoming's numbers shape the calculator. The mortgage payment, refinance, PMI, and home-affordability calculators all run on three local inputs that swing the answer materially: the prevailing 30-year fixed rate, the effective property tax rate as a share of home value, and the homeowners-insurance premium that the average policyholder is paying for the same coverage envelope. Wyoming-specific values for each of those are pre-loaded above so the calculator's default scenario reflects what an actual buyer would see at closing, not a national average that smooths over the differences. Override any field to test a different scenario; the math reruns instantly in your browser without sending the inputs anywhere.

Local context as of 2026-04-19. Live data sources are listed in the Sources section below; each metric carries its own retrieval date.

Wyoming versus the U.S. baseline

How does Wyoming stack up against the national average on the metrics that drive the calculators on this page? The table below pairs the Wyoming-specific reading against the U.S. baseline so you can see at a glance whether your local scenario runs above or below typical. Three to five percentage points of difference on most of these inputs translates into meaningful changes in calculator output — for example, a 50-basis-point difference in mortgage rate moves the monthly payment on a $400,000 30-year loan by roughly $130.

MetricWyomingU.S. baselineDifference
Median home value[zillow]$340,000$420,000-19.0%
Property tax rate[tax-foundation]0.61%1.07%-43.0%
Top marginal income tax[tax-foundation]None~4.08% (volume-weighted)−4.08 pp
Cost-of-living index (RPP)[bea-rpp]91.6100.0-8.4 pts
Avg homeowners insurance[naic]$1,290/yr$1,544/yr-16.5%

How to use the Wyoming Mortgage & Home Hub

Walk through using the mortgage & home calculators with Wyoming-specific defaults pre-loaded from primary sources.

  1. Pre-fill with local dataEach calculator on this page loads with state- or city-specific defaults pulled live from primary sources (FRED, BLS, Zillow, Freddie Mac PMMS, IRS, BEA). The blue values shown next to each input are the local averages so you can see how your scenario compares to the typical case before changing anything.
  2. Override the inputs you controlChange any field to model your actual situation. The math reruns in your browser the moment you change a value — no signup, no API call, no data transmission. Hover over the small (i) icon next to each label to see the formula that field feeds and where the default came from.
  3. Read the derived valuesThe result panel shows the primary calculation (monthly payment, take-home pay, savings projection, etc.) plus the intermediate values that drive it. Each line item is labeled with the formula component it represents so you can verify the arithmetic against any agency publication, textbook, or competing calculator.
  4. Adjust assumptions and re-runMost calculators have a section for assumption inputs that are easy to overlook — annual raises, expected return, inflation, vacancy rate, depreciation schedule, marginal vs. effective tax treatment. The defaults are conservative; aggressive scenarios usually require explicit overrides.
  5. Save to "My Numbers"When the inputs match your reality, click Save to "My Numbers". The values persist to your device's local storage (IndexedDB) and reload automatically on your next visit. Nothing is transmitted to any CalcFi server — the saved-state feature is deliberately client-side only for privacy.
  6. Compare scenarios side by sideMost calculators offer a comparison view that shows two or more scenarios side by side. Use this to model decision points: 15-year vs 30-year mortgage, Roth vs Traditional IRA, salary vs hourly, lease vs buy. The comparison view also produces a shareable summary you can download as PNG or PDF.

Featured Mortgage & Home Calculators for Wyoming

Start with these 5 most-used mortgage & home calculators — each pre-loaded with Wyoming's tax rates, median home values, insurance costs, and cost-of-living data.

Mortgage Payment Calculator

Calculate monthly payments including principal, interest, taxes, and insurance.

Open with Wyomingdata →

WY

Mortgage Affordability

Find out how much house you can afford based on income and debts.

Open with Wyomingdata →

WY

Refinance Savings

See how much you could save by refinancing your current mortgage.

Open with Wyomingdata →

WY

Rent vs Buy

Compare the long-term costs of renting versus buying a home.

Open with Wyomingdata →

WY

Down Payment Savings

Plan how long it will take to save for your down payment.

Open with Wyomingdata →

WY

All Mortgage & Home Calculators Pre-Filled for Wyoming

Browse every mortgage & home calculator with Wyoming-specific defaults for 2026.

Mortgage Payment Calculator

WY data

Calculate monthly payments including principal, interest, taxes, and insurance.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Mortgage Affordability

WY data

Find out how much house you can afford based on income and debts.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Refinance Savings

WY data

See how much you could save by refinancing your current mortgage.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Rent vs Buy

WY data

Compare the long-term costs of renting versus buying a home.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Down Payment Savings

WY data

Plan how long it will take to save for your down payment.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Home Appreciation

WY data

Estimate future home value based on historical appreciation rates.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Extra Mortgage Payment

WY data

See how extra payments can shorten your loan and save interest.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

HELOC Calculator

WY data

Calculate home equity line of credit payments and borrowing power.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

PMI Removal

WY data

Find out when you can drop private mortgage insurance.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Home Insurance Estimator

WY data

Estimate homeowners insurance costs based on property details.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Property Tax Estimator

WY data

Estimate annual property taxes for any home value.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Closing Cost Calculator

WY data

Estimate buyer and seller closing costs for a home purchase.

Open calculator with Wyomingdata →

Wyoming vs National Average: Mortgage & Housing

See how Wyoming compares to the national average on key financial metrics relevant to mortgage & home planning. These differences directly affect your calculations.

MetricWyomingNational AvgDifferenceSource
Median Home Price (ZHVI)[1]$340,000$420,000-$80,000[1]
Property Tax Rate[2]0.61%1.07%-0.46%[2]
Income Tax (top marginal)[3]0% (none)4.6%-4.60%[3]
Avg Insurance Cost[4]$1,290$1,544-$254[4]
Cost of Living Index (RPP)[5]91.6100.0-8.4[5]
Median Household Income[6]$72,060——[6]
Avg Monthly PITI (est.)[7]$2,153/mo——[7]

Data refreshed from primary public datasets; last reviewed 2026-04-19.

Mortgage & Home Calculators by City in Wyoming

Property values, tax rates, and cost of living vary significantly within Wyoming. Top 5 cities with localized calculator results:

Cheyenne, WY

Median home: $310,000 | COL: 91

Mortgage & Home Calculators in Other States

Comparing mortgage & home options across states? Pick another state for localized results, tips, and programs.

AlabamaAlaskaArizonaArkansasCaliforniaColoradoConnecticutDelawareFloridaGeorgiaHawaiiIdahoIllinoisIndianaIowaKansasKentuckyLouisianaMaineMarylandMassachusettsMichiganMinnesotaMississippiMissouriMontanaNebraskaNevadaNew HampshireNew JerseyNew MexicoNew YorkNorth CarolinaNorth DakotaOhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaSouth DakotaTennesseeTexasUtahVermontVirginiaWashingtonWest VirginiaWisconsinDistrict of Columbia

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Frequently Asked Questions: Mortgage & Home in Wyoming

What is the average property tax rate in Wyoming?

Wyoming's effective property tax rate is 0.61%, compared to the national average of 1.07%. On a $340,000 home, that's approximately $2,074 per year.

How much does a home cost in Wyoming?

The median home price in Wyoming is $340,000, which is below the national median of $420,000. A 20% down payment would be $68,000.

Mortgage & Home: complete guides & worked examples

Long-form content kept collapsed by default so the calculator grid stays front-and-center. Expand any section below for primary-source analysis, worked examples, and category FAQs.

Guides (6 articles)▾

Complete mortgage calculator guide 2026

14 min read

Buying a home in 2026 is the single largest financial decision most American households will make, and the mortgage calculator is the one tool that turns a listing-site sticker price into a real monthly number. This guide walks through every input that changes that number, the assumptions baked into each CalcFi mortgage calculator, and the authoritative data feeds we use to keep the defaults current.

How principal and interest actually work

A 30-year fixed mortgage is an amortizing loan: every monthly payment covers interest on the remaining balance plus a tiny slice of principal. In year one, roughly 80% of each payment goes to interest; by year twenty-five that ratio has flipped. Our Mortgage Payment Calculator renders the full amortization schedule so you can see exactly when interest crosses below principal — typically around year fifteen on a 6.3% loan per the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey[1].

PITI: the four-part monthly number

Real housing cost is principal, interest, taxes, and insurance. Property tax rates vary from 0.28% in Hawaii to 2.23% in New Jersey (Tax Foundation)[3], and homeowners insurance averages $1,428 nationally but exceeds $3,500 in Louisiana and Florida per NAIC[4]. The CalcFi mortgage stack folds both into the headline monthly figure.

Affordability frameworks: 28/36 and 43% DTI

Lenders apply two standard ratios: the front-end ratio (housing ÷ gross income ≤ 28%) and the back-end ratio (all debts ÷ gross income ≤ 36%, up to 43% for conforming loans). Our Mortgage Affordability Calculator lets you stress-test both simultaneously with your real W-2 income, and cross-checks against the ZHVI median home value for the state you select[2].

Rent-vs-buy: the break-even math

Buying beats renting only when your total homeownership cost (PITI + maintenance − tax savings − equity build − appreciation) falls below local rent. Zillow's ZORI rent index[2] combined with HUD Fair Market Rents[10] powers our Rent vs Buy break-even calculation, with sensitivity sliders for rate, appreciation, and length of stay.

Refinance decisions in 2026

The rate-lowering refinance case requires at least a ~75 bps drop to clear typical closing costs of 2–5% of loan balance. With the PMMS 30-year average at 6.3% in early 2026[1], buyers who locked above 7.5% in 2023 now have a clear case; those at 6.5% generally do not. The Refinance Savings tool computes net present value of rate-versus-cost trade-off across loan terms.

Mortgage by state: 10-state comparison of rates, taxes, and insurance

11 min read

Where you buy changes your monthly PITI by more than the listing price sometimes suggests. A $400,000 home in Texas produces a very different payment than a $400,000 home in California, because property-tax rates, state income tax treatment of mortgage interest, and homeowners-insurance rates all differ wildly.

Rate uniformity but cost divergence

Nationwide, 30-year rates cluster within ±0.25% of the Freddie Mac PMMS weekly average[1]. What splits states is the rest of PITI:

  • Hawaii — property tax 0.28% but ZHVI median home value above $830k (Zillow)[2].
  • New Jersey — property tax 2.23%, ZHVI median ~$520k — highest effective property-tax bill in the nation (Tax Foundation)[3].
  • Texas — no state income tax, but property tax 1.60% and the highest homeowners-insurance premiums in the Gulf region (NAIC)[4].
  • California — Prop 13 keeps acquisition-basis property tax ~0.75%, but ZHVI ~$760k and 13.3% top marginal state income tax compress affordability.
  • Florida — homestead exemption + no state income tax offset property insurance that averages 2× the national mean post-hurricane repricing.
  • Illinois — property tax 2.08%, ZHVI ~$260k — highest property-tax-to-value ratio outside the Northeast.
  • Massachusetts — property tax 1.14%, ZHVI ~$610k, state income tax 9% on capital gains.
  • Nevada — property tax 0.48%, no state income tax, ZHVI ~$430k — one of the friendliest tax regimes.
  • New York — property tax 1.72%, ZHVI ~$465k, top marginal state income 10.9%.
  • North Carolina — property tax 0.82%, ZHVI ~$330k, state income 4.5% flat.

Every state-variant hub at /hub/mortgage/[state] renders these numbers inline with the full comparison table against national averages. The CalcFi state-level mortgage data is refreshed weekly from PMMS plus quarterly from ZHVI.

Year-over-year mortgage trends 2020-2026

9 min read

The seven-year window from 2020 through 2026 contains the most dramatic mortgage-rate cycle in a generation. The Federal Reserve's zero-rate policy during COVID pushed the PMMS 30-year fixed to an all-time low of 2.65% in January 2021[1]. Inflation response from March 2022 onward drove rates above 7.7% by October 2023. Since early 2024 rates have settled in a 6.0–6.6% band and sit near 6.3% in Q1 2026.

What the rate swing did to affordability

A $400,000 home at 2.65% carries a principal-and-interest payment of $1,612. The same $400,000 home at 7.75% costs $2,867 — a 78% jump with no change to the underlying asset. The Fed's FRED macro series[7] shows real median household income grew only 6% over the same window, meaning affordability (home price ÷ buyer income × rate multiplier) compressed by roughly 30%.

Regional divergence

Sunbelt markets (TX, AZ, FL, NC) absorbed migration during 2020–2022 with ZHVI gains of 40–55%[2]. Those markets saw 2023–2024 price cooling of 5–10%. Rust Belt and Midwest markets (OH, MI, PA) saw smaller pandemic gains (+20–25%) and have held value through the rate cycle.

2026 outlook

Consensus among the MBA, Fannie Mae, and NAR forecasts (2026 mid-year releases) is for the PMMS 30-year to sit in a 5.9–6.3% range through year-end as the Fed holds policy. Housing starts remain ~20% below the long-run average per Census data[11], keeping upward pressure on prices even at elevated rates.

Mortgage decision framework: which calculator to use when

8 min read

CalcFi publishes 18 mortgage calculators. Picking the right one for your question saves time. Use this decision tree:

Stage 1 — Pre-shopping

  • How much house can I afford? → Mortgage Affordability. Inputs: gross income, monthly debts, down payment, target DTI. Output: max purchase price using 28/36 rule.
  • How long until I can make a down payment? → Down Payment Savings. Inputs: target home price, down %, current savings, monthly contribution, HYSA rate. Output: months to goal.
  • Should I rent longer instead? → Rent vs Buy. Computes break-even years at current rate, rent growth, and local appreciation.

Stage 2 — Under contract

  • What's my monthly payment? → Mortgage Payment. Full PITI + amortization schedule.
  • Closing costs? → Closing Cost Calculator. Estimates buyer- and seller-side fees per CFPB Closing Disclosure format.
  • Should I buy down the rate? → Mortgage Payment with point sensitivity slider. Net-present-value of point cost vs monthly savings at your expected tenure.

Stage 3 — During ownership

  • Can I refinance profitably? → Refinance Savings. Breakeven on closing costs vs monthly savings.
  • What if I pay extra principal? → Extra Mortgage Payment. Shows years and interest shaved.
  • When can I drop PMI? → PMI Removal. Uses appreciation + amortization to hit 78% LTV.
  • Tap home equity? → HELOC Calculator. Variable-rate draw-period vs fixed-home-equity-loan comparison.

Stage 4 — Investor

If the property is a rental, use Investment Property ROI instead of primary-residence tools. It factors rental income, vacancy, maintenance reserve, and depreciation tax shield (27.5-year straight line per IRS)[16].

Advanced mortgage strategies: recast, points, and biweekly

10 min read

Most buyers use only a mortgage payment calculator and a refinance calculator. Advanced owners deploy four more strategies that can shave five-figure sums off total loan cost.

1. Recasting

A recast re-amortizes your remaining balance after you've made a large principal prepayment (typically $10k+). Your rate and term stay the same; your monthly payment drops. Fee: usually $250–$500. Used when you've received a windfall (bonus, inheritance, sale proceeds) and want to lower monthly obligation without refinancing into a higher current rate.

2. Discount points

One point = 1% of loan amount paid at closing to reduce the rate by typically 0.25%. Break-even is (point cost ÷ monthly savings) months. On a $400k loan at 6.3% vs 6.05%, one point costs $4,000 and saves ~$65/month — break-even 61 months. Only worth it if you'll hold the mortgage longer than the break-even window. The CalcFi Mortgage Payment Calculator includes a point sensitivity slider.

3. Biweekly payment acceleration

Paying half your mortgage every two weeks (26 half-payments/year = 13 full payments instead of 12) shortens a 30-year loan by ~4 years and saves ~$50k on a typical loan. The Extra Mortgage Payment calculator models this precisely.

4. PMI drop timing

Federal law (HPA 1998) requires automatic PMI termination at 78% LTV based on original schedule. You can request drop at 80% LTV. With appreciation, many buyers hit 80% much earlier than amortization implies. The PMI Removal Calculator uses ZHVI appreciation data[2] to project the earliest request date.

5. ARM vs fixed in a high-rate environment

7/1 and 10/1 ARMs are typically priced 50–75 bps below the 30-year fixed. If you expect to move within the fixed period, the rate spread is free money. If not, the reset cap risk (usually 2% first reset, 5% lifetime) can add $500+/month overnight. Model both scenarios before signing.

Common mortgage mistakes that cost $50,000+

7 min read

The following mistakes appear repeatedly in CFPB complaint data and in CalcFi user feedback. Each one costs the average buyer five figures over the life of a loan.

1. Shopping rate without shopping fees

Origination fees, underwriting fees, and lender-paid title can vary by $3,000+ between lenders at the same headline rate. Always compare the Loan Estimate (LE) line items, not just the rate.

2. Ignoring the APR

APR is rate + fees normalized to a percentage. A 6.25% rate with 2 points has a similar APR to a 6.5% no-point loan. Compare APRs for an apples-to-apples cost.

3. Buying the rate-buy-down oversell

Lenders push points aggressively because they boost commission. Only buy points if you have high certainty of holding the loan past the break-even horizon.

4. Skipping the rate float-down

Most lock agreements allow a one-time float-down if rates drop ≥25 bps before closing. Fee: $0–$500. Worth asking.

5. Under-estimating insurance and taxes

Zestimate-style property tax estimates often use prior-owner assessments. Always re-run PITI using the assessor's expected reassessment rate (typically 90–100% of sale price).

6. Not factoring PMI correctly

PMI ranges 0.3–1.5% of loan amount annually depending on LTV and credit score. On a $400k loan at 1% PMI, that's $333/month until LTV hits 80%.

Real Examples (6 scenarios)▾

Texas first-time buyer at median price

Home Price
$340,000 (TX ZHVI median)
Down Payment
10% ($34,000)
Rate
6.3% (PMMS 30-yr avg)
Property Tax
1.60% (TX Tax Foundation)
Insurance
$2,400/yr (TX NAIC avg)
HOA
$0

Result: PITI: $2,649/month · total interest: $374,200 over 30 years

On a Texas-median purchase, no state income tax helps offset the above-average 1.60% property tax and high homeowners insurance costs. PMI of ~$85/month applies until LTV hits 78% (about year 10 at 4% appreciation per Zillow ZHVI). Total 30-year cost of ownership: ~$954,000 including tax and insurance.

California move-up buyer in Bay Area

Home Price
$1,200,000
Down Payment
20% ($240,000)
Rate
6.35% (jumbo)
Property Tax
0.75% (Prop 13 acquisition basis)
Insurance
$2,100/yr
HOA
$0

Result: PITI: $6,880/month · state income tax deduction on $10k SALT cap

California's Prop 13 keeps property tax low vs other high-value states, but the 10k SALT cap limits federal deductibility. Jumbo rate is competitive with conforming in 2026. Affordability floor is approximately $260k household income using 28% front-end DTI.

Florida retiree downsizing

Home Price
$420,000
Down Payment
50% ($210,000)
Rate
6.3%
Property Tax
0.89% (with homestead exemption)
Insurance
$4,800/yr (FL post-2023 repricing)
HOA
$320/month

Result: PITI + HOA: $2,474/month

Florida homestead exemption shields $50k from property tax assessment. Homeowners insurance is now the dominant variable cost — post-hurricane rate resets have pushed premiums to $4,800+ in coastal zones per NAIC filings. No state income tax helps retiree cash flow.

New Jersey young family in high-tax town

Home Price
$620,000
Down Payment
15% ($93,000)
Rate
6.3%
Property Tax
2.23% (NJ Tax Foundation)
Insurance
$1,650/yr
PMI
$220/month (until 78% LTV)

Result: PITI + PMI: $4,920/month

New Jersey has the highest effective property tax in the nation. The $13,800 annual property-tax bill is the single largest PITI component. SALT cap limits federal deductibility. Refinance to drop PMI target: year 6–7 with typical appreciation.

Rent-vs-buy: Austin, 7-year horizon

Purchase Price
$425,000
Alternative Monthly Rent
$2,250 (ZORI Austin)
Rent Growth
3%/yr
Appreciation
4%/yr (Zillow Austin 10-yr avg)
Down Payment
10%
Rate
6.3%
Length of Stay
7 years

Result: Buying saves ~$28,000 NPV vs renting

At a 7-year horizon, Austin favors buying by ~$28k NPV after accounting for closing costs, maintenance (1% of home value/yr), principal paydown, and appreciation. Break-even shortens if rent growth exceeds 3% or lengthens if appreciation falls below 3%.

Refinance break-even: locked at 7.75% in 2023

Current Balance
$385,000
Current Rate
7.75%
New Rate
6.3%
Closing Costs
$9,500
Expected Tenure
6 more years

Result: Savings: $361/month · break-even 26 months

A buyer who locked at the October 2023 peak of 7.75% now has a clean refinance case. Monthly savings of $361 pay back the $9,500 closing cost in 26 months, with 46 months of net savings remaining at the 6-year horizon. Total net savings: ~$16,600.

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Compare Wyoming vs other states

How we compute these figures — methodology

This page combines three inputs: (1) the calculator formulas themselves, which run client-side so no inputs leave your browser; (2) Wyoming financial constants from primary public datasets; and (3) national benchmarks for comparison. The Wyoming data uses property tax effective rate (0.61%), median home value ($340,000), and no state income tax — all from the sources listed below.

Refresh cadence: state tax brackets are reviewed annually after legislative sessions. Property-tax rates, ZHVI home values, insurance premiums, and BEA RPP cost-of-living indices are reviewed annually against primary sources. Page-level dateModified matches the most recent data retrieval date shown above.

Known limits: statewide averages mask large intra-state variance — county-level property tax and metro-level home prices differ significantly. For precise per-city figures, click through to individual calculator pages.

Sources

Every number on this page cites a primary public dataset. Last reviewed 2026-04-19 (auto-bumped on the next ISR refresh after an ETL run).

  1. Zillow Research — ZHVI (Zillow Home Value Index) + ZORI (Zillow Observed Rent Index) — www.zillow.com/research/data. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  2. Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) — weekly national mortgage rates — www.freddiemac.com/pmms. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  3. Tax Foundation — Property Taxes Paid as % of Owner-Occupied Housing Value; State Tax Rates and Brackets; Estate/Inheritance; Social Security Taxation — taxfoundation.org/data/all/state. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  4. NAIC Dwelling Fire, Homeowners Owners, and Homeowners Tenants Insurance Report — content.naic.org/article/homeowners-insurance-report. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  5. HUD Fair Market Rents — 50th-percentile 2-bedroom FY — www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/fmr.html. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  6. U.S. Census Bureau — American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates — www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  7. State Departments of Revenue — official bracket + deduction publications (one primary URL per state; linked in the brackets table below) — taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/state-income-tax-rates. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  8. Bureau of Economic Analysis — Regional Price Parities by State — www.bea.gov/data/prices-inflation/regional-price-parities-state-and-metro-area. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  9. U.S. Department of Labor — State Minimum Wage Laws — www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/minimum-wage/state. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  10. FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) — real median household income, unemployment, HPI, LFPR per state — fred.stlouisfed.org. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
  11. BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) — state-level occupational wages — www.bls.gov/oes. Retrieved 2026-04-19.

CalcFi does not sell data. If you spot an error, email hello@calcfi.app with the URL and the correct figure.