cityparity

$225,000 in San Francisco ≈ A$290,808 in Sydney

Software engineer pay: San Francisco vs Sydney

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 → Sydney

  • 5 more vacation days per year in Sydney (statutory)
  • 10 more paid parental-leave weeks (22 vs 12)
  • Universal healthcare in Sydney (no premium / minimal OOP)

The headline math

San Francisco household gross $225,000
San Francisco taxes (29.0%) −$65,353
San Francisco living costs −$72,671
San Francisco net cash $86,976
Sydney household gross needed A$290,808($201,950)
Sydney taxes (30.7%) −A$89,150
Sydney living costs −A$76,414
Sydney net cash A$125,244

Computed at the city-median tech-worker salary, San Francisco (a senior software engineer) · effective tax rates: 29.0% vs 30.7%

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

Open the interactive calculator to run your own →

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Moving from San Francisco to Sydney for a software engineer

$225,000 in San Francisco requires A$290,808 in Sydney to match on household net cash. The gap is real, but it is smaller than the nominal numbers suggest once taxes run their course. Progressive brackets compress the after-tax difference faster than a compensation benchmarking site would lead you to believe, because those sites show gross and stop there.

The effective tax rate goes from 29.0% in San Francisco to 30.7% in Sydney. That 1.6-point jump is what the equivalence solver is working against when it finds the matching gross salary.

Unvested equity changes this calculation entirely. RSU value is not modeled in the defaults above, but if you are mid-cycle at your current employer, leaving means forfeiting grants you have already been working toward, and that difference can be larger than the annual take-home delta that drove the comparison in the first place. The Advanced section's "RSU / stock annual value" field is where you plug that number in. Equity-heavy comp favors lower-tax cities at vesting; the after-tax discount gets larger the bigger the grant.

On an employer plan the healthy years feel nearly free; it's the bad year that finds the gap. Sydney is universal, so most of that tail risk goes away. San Francisco still runs $3,680 a year in premiums and out-of-pocket costs, and none of it shows up on an offer letter.

Sydney engineers get 20 vacation days per year. San Francisco averages 15. That 5-day gap is real money at a senior IC's daily rate, and it does not show up on the offer letter.

No kids, employer healthcare, and a single high-bracket income: this is the configuration that makes San Francisco look best in a head-to-head comparison. It is also the configuration most likely to change. The family scenario page (linked below) models what shifts once childcare and a second earner enter the picture.

Common questions

How much do you need to earn in Sydney to match a $225,000 salary in San Francisco?

About A$290,808. cityparity solves for the Sydney 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.

Is healthcare free in Sydney?

Sydney has universal healthcare, so there are no US-style premiums or large deductibles. cityparity counts that as real money you don't spend, which is part of why the equivalent salary is lower than the raw number suggests.

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

Sydney has about 31 paid days off a year (vacation plus public holidays) and 22 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 →