cityparity

$280,000 in San Francisco ≈ €236,441 in Amsterdam

Moving to Amsterdam from San Francisco with a family

Equivalence is solved so household net cash matches across both cities, with taxes, housing, childcare, healthcare, food, and travel all included.

What changes: San Francisco → Amsterdam

  • 5 more vacation days per year in Amsterdam (statutory)
  • 6 fewer paid parental-leave weeks (6 vs 12)
  • Childcare drops ~$26k/yr in Amsterdam (subsidized)

The headline math

San Francisco household gross $280,000
San Francisco taxes (26.2%) −$73,450
San Francisco living costs −$155,220
San Francisco net cash $51,330
Amsterdam household gross needed €236,441
Amsterdam taxes (42.3%) −€99,948
Amsterdam living costs −€89,269
Amsterdam net cash €47,224

Computed at the city-median tech-worker salary, San Francisco (a family with two kids) · effective tax rates: 26.2% vs 42.3%

These numbers use one scenario's assumptions. Plug in your own salary, family size, and lifestyle.

Open the interactive calculator to run your own →

Moving from San Francisco to Amsterdam for a family

For a family of four, this comparison produces a different answer than a single-person look at the same cities. Childcare costs, parental leave policy, and the second earner's tax treatment all push the number. With a partner at 60% of the primary salary and two kids in daycare, a $280,000 household in San Francisco needs €236,441 in Amsterdam to keep the same net cash.

Childcare is the biggest single swing factor in this comparison. San Francisco households pay $38,400 per year; Amsterdam caps it at €11,100 via subsidy. That difference flows directly to net cash. A standard salary comparison won't show it at all.

Parental leave is similar: 12 weeks paid in San Francisco, 6 in Amsterdam.

Both cities require private health insurance. San Francisco runs $11,324; Amsterdam runs €4,285.

K-12 schools score higher on PISA 2022 in USA (489 (math 465, reading 504, science 499)) than in Netherlands (480 (math 493, reading 459, science 488)), a 9-point gap on the OECD's standardized 15-year-old assessment. PISA is one signal; local school choice and curriculum philosophy matter at least as much.

Amsterdam also adds 5 more vacation days per year (20 vs 15). With kids, that is school breaks actually covered without burning PTO.

The second-earner question is worth running separately. In high-childcare-cost cities, full-time daycare can eat most of a partner's after-tax income. In Amsterdam, subsidized childcare changes that math entirely: both salaries actually make it to the household. Use the "Partner works in" toggle in the calculator to see what that shift does to your specific numbers.

Common questions

How much do you need to earn in Amsterdam to match a $280,000 salary in San Francisco?

About €236,441. cityparity solves for the Amsterdam gross salary whose net cash (after taxes, housing, childcare, healthcare, and the rest) equals what you keep in San Francisco. It's an equivalence, not a raw conversion.

How much is childcare in Amsterdam compared with San Francisco?

Childcare is one of the biggest swings for a family moving from San Francisco to Amsterdam. cityparity nets each city's daycare cost against any government child allowance, so the figure reflects what you'd actually pay out of pocket.

Is healthcare free in Amsterdam?

Amsterdam does not have universal healthcare, so out-of-pocket costs are modeled the same way as in San Francisco.

How much vacation and parental leave do you get in Amsterdam?

Amsterdam has about 31 paid days off a year (vacation plus public holidays) and 9 weeks of parental leave. cityparity surfaces these as deltas rather than dollars, because time off is part of the real comparison.

Run your own numbers in the interactive calculator →

Related comparisons

Every figure here comes from the same engine as the interactive calculator: real progressive tax brackets, city-median costs, childcare net of government allowances, and the social safety net priced in. Sources are cited per row in the calculator, refreshed annually. Read the full methodology →