Quick answer
Moving from Kansas to Georgia: state tax drops from 5.7% (top) → 5.49%, saving $252/year on $120K. Avg 1BR rent shifts $900 → $1,550/mo (more expensive).
Migration Guide · 2026
Moving from Kansas to Georgia
The full financial picture: tax impact at your salary, rent and home price shift, top destination cities, residency timeline, and honest trade-offs.
Last updated: April 23, 2026
What You'll Save (or Lose)
Salary $80K
+$168
/year state tax saved
Salary $120K
+$252
/year state tax saved
Salary $200K
+$420
/year state tax saved
State income tax delta × gross salary. Doesn't include property tax, sales tax, or federal impact. See full Kansas vs Georgia comparison for more.
Housing Shift
| Metric | Kansas (from) | Georgia (to) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avg 1BR rent | $900/mo | $1,550/mo | +$650/mo |
| Avg median home | $180K | $358K | +$178K |
| State income tax | 5.7% (top) | 5.49% | −0.2pp |
| Avg walkability | 35/100 | 47/100 | +12 |
Top Georgia Metros to Land In
Ranked by 1BR rent, cheapest first. Each links to a full city guide.
What to Expect in Georgia
The honest trade-offs. People who move here usually don't regret it, but these are the things to plan for.
Traffic is extraordinary. I-285 (the Perimeter) and I-85 into downtown are regularly 60-90 minute crawls during rush hour. Plan your residence and workplace carefully.
Summer heat is Deep-South-humid. 90°F + 75% humidity from June through early September. Less extreme than Phoenix, more oppressive than Nashville.
Atlanta sprawl means car dependency everywhere except the few walkable neighborhoods (Midtown, Virginia-Highland, Inman Park, Decatur).
Public school quality varies dramatically. Atlanta Public Schools and some suburban districts are excellent; others lag.
Tornado and severe thunderstorm risk is real — the South regularly gets dangerous tornadoes in spring. Atlanta had a destructive tornado in 2008.
Residency Timeline
The practical steps to establish Georgia residency and stop paying Kansas tax.
Before moving
- →Lock in Georgia housing (lease or purchase)
- →Book mover or container service (4–8 weeks advance for cross-country)
- →Notify USPS of mail forwarding (start date = move date)
Within 30 days of arriving
- →Change driver's license to Georgia (most DMVs require 30–60 days)
- →Register to vote in new state
- →Transfer vehicle registration and plates
- →Update insurance (auto + homeowners/renters)
Within 6 months
- →File part-year tax return — pay Kansas tax on income earned before move, Georgia tax on income after
- →Build paper trail for Georgia residency (utility bills, bank statements, doctor visits, gym membership)
- →Consider audit documentation if earning $500K+
Not legal advice. For complex situations (large capital gains, stock options, deferred comp), consult a tax CPA before moving.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much will I save moving from Kansas to Georgia on taxes?
On an $80K salary you save roughly $168/year in state income tax moving from Kansas (5.7% (top)) to Georgia (5.49%). On $120K: $252/year. On $200K: $420/year.
Is rent cheaper in Georgia than Kansas?
No, Georgia averages higher rent ($1,550/mo vs $900/mo in Kansas). Cost of living is higher in specific metros — research your target city.
What is the timeline for establishing Georgia residency?
Most states recognize residency after 30-183 days of physical presence plus intent to remain (show via driver's license, voter registration, taxes filed as resident, home/apartment lease). Tax-critical: you become a Georgia tax resident for the year you spend 183+ days in-state OR the year you declare Georgia as your permanent home. For high earners leaving Kansas, document the move carefully to avoid residency audits — some states audit departing high earners.
What are the best cities in Georgia to move to?
Top Georgia metros we track: Atlanta ($1,650/mo 1BR), Savannah ($1,450/mo 1BR). Cheapest is Savannah at $1,450/mo; most expensive is Atlanta at $1,650/mo.
How much does it cost to move from Kansas to Georgia?
Depends on distance and household size. A 2BR household moving 1,500-2,000 miles (typical cross-country) runs roughly $2,500-$3,500 DIY U-Haul, $5,000-$7,000 hybrid (U-Pack/PODS), or $12,000-$18,000 full-service movers. We have city-pair estimates at /moving-cost.