What that salary actually buys in Seattle
Why a single person modest in Seattle costs $73,500
Seattle's cost-of-living index of 147 means everyday costs run roughly 47% above the national average. To maintain a single person modest, the standard national-average baseline of $50,000 adjusts to $73,500 here.
The biggest line item: rent
A 1-bedroom in Seattle averages $2,100/month — that's $25,200/year, or about 34% of the salary required for this lifestyle. Most financial planning rules suggest keeping housing under 30% of take-home pay; on this salary, your housing cap would be $1,323/month, which is tight against the typical Seattle 1-bedroom of $2,100/month.
Take-home reality
Your gross is $73,500, but federal taxes, FICA, and Washington state taxes typically eat 25-30%. After-tax income lands around $4,410/month — that's the number that has to cover housing, transportation, food, and savings. If that feels tight for the lifestyle you have in mind, scale up your salary target.
Comparison: Seattle's median income
Seattle's median household income is $78,340, which is above the required salary for this tier. That means more than half of households in Seattle could plausibly afford this lifestyle.