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Living in Missouri ยท 2026

Is $40,000 enough to live in Missouri?

Single adult ยท MO ยท 2026 tax brackets ยท Real cost-of-living data

Statewide verdict:Comfortable

Monthly take-home

$2,704

Avg monthly expenses

$2,071

Avg monthly surplus

$633

Savings potential

~23%

After-tax take-home in Missouri

Gross salary$40,000
Federal income taxโˆ’ $2,694
State income taxโˆ’ $1,797
Social Securityโˆ’ $2,480
Medicareโˆ’ $580
Annual take-home$32,449
Effective tax rate18.88%

How $40,000 feels in Missouri cities

Rent: HUD FMR 2026 ยท Food: USDA Low-Cost Plan ร— COL ยท Transport/Utilities/Healthcare: BLS CES ร— COL

Kansas City

COL index: 0.96ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,200
Food
$418
Transport
$168
Utilities
$158
Healthcare
$192
Total: $2,136/mo
Surplus: $568/mo
Rent burden: 44.4% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full Kansas City analysis โ†’

St Louis

COL index: 0.96ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,200
Food
$405
Transport
$168
Utilities
$158
Healthcare
$192
Total: $2,123/mo
Surplus: $581/mo
Rent burden: 44.4% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full St Louis analysis โ†’

Springfield

COL index: 0.88ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,000
Food
$396
Transport
$154
Utilities
$145
Healthcare
$176
Total: $1,871/mo
Surplus: $833/mo
Rent burden: 37.0% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full Springfield analysis โ†’

Columbia

COL index: 1.00ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,250
Food
$409
Transport
$175
Utilities
$165
Healthcare
$200
Total: $2,199/mo
Surplus: $505/mo
Rent burden: 46.2% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full Columbia analysis โ†’

Independence

COL index: 0.91ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,050
Food
$396
Transport
$159
Utilities
$150
Healthcare
$182
Total: $1,937/mo
Surplus: $767/mo
Rent burden: 38.8% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full Independence analysis โ†’

Lee Summit

COL index: 0.98ร— national avg

Comfortable
Rent (1BR)
$1,200
Food
$431
Transport
$172
Utilities
$162
Healthcare
$196
Total: $2,161/mo
Surplus: $543/mo
Rent burden: 44.4% โ€” High (35โ€“50%)
Full Lee Summit analysis โ†’

50 / 30 / 20 Budget Planner

Based on your monthly take-home of $2,704 ($32,448/yr)

Needs 50%Wants 30%Savings 20%
Needs50%

$1,352

per month

  • โ€บRent / mortgage
  • โ€บGroceries
  • โ€บUtilities
  • โ€บInsurance
  • โ€บMinimum debt payments
  • โ€บTransportation
Wants30%

$811

per month

  • โ€บDining out
  • โ€บStreaming services
  • โ€บGym
  • โ€บHobbies
  • โ€บTravel
  • โ€บShopping
Savings20%

$541

per month

  • โ€บEmergency fund
  • โ€บ401(k) / IRA
  • โ€บInvestments
  • โ€บDown payment fund
  • โ€บDebt payoff (extra)

Needs / year

$16,224

Wants / year

$9,734

Savings / year

$6,490

Salary Intelligence

Below comfortable level in Kansas City

Rent would consume 44% of take-home income โ€” above the 35% stress threshold. A higher salary or lower-cost housing is needed for financial stability in this city.

Lifestyle score: 5.2/10 (Fair)

Lifestyle Assessment

A $40,000 salary comfortably supports a fair single lifestyle in Kansas City, Missouri, with approximately $568/month (~21% of take-home) available for savings โ€” meeting or exceeding the recommended 20% savings rate.

Purchasing Power

Kansas City is near the national cost-of-living average (index: 0.96). $40,000 here is roughly equivalent to $77,083 in San Francisco or $36,667 in an affordable city like Birmingham.

State & National Benchmark

$40,000 is slightly above the Missouri individual median of $39,200 (+2%). The state household median is $67,716.

State individual median

$39,200

+2%

State household median

$67,716

-41%

Tax reduction strategies

Maximize 401(k) Contributions โ€” Up to $5,170 in federal tax (22% bracket)
Contribute to a Traditional IRA โ€” Up to $1,540 in federal tax (22% bracket)

$40,000 vs. Missouri income benchmarks

Individual median (Missouri)

$39,200

+2% vs. this salary

Household median (Missouri)

$67,716

-41% vs. this salary

Source: US Census Bureau ACS 2023

Related salary insights

Explore other salary levels in Missouri

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Reviewed by

Finance Editor

CPA, 10+ years in personal finance

Data Sources

Data updated monthly using government datasets.