It’s a tale as old as time: If you live in a high-cost area like Long Island, San Francisco, or Seattle, your paycheck doesn’t stretch nearly as far as it would in, say, Pittsburgh. Yet, the IRS taxes your income exactly the same.
A new bill from lawmakers on Capitol Hill would flip that script by linking your federal tax obligations to your home address.
The Cost of Living Tax Cut Act, introduced by House Reps. Laura Gillen (D-NY-04) and Mike Lawler (R-NY-17) would adjust federal income tax brackets based entirely on where a taxpayer lives.
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“This bipartisan bill would help lower taxes for families in high-cost areas [like Long Island] by accounting for regional differences in the cost of living and ensuring taxpayers can keep more of what they earn,” Gillen said in a recent release.
Lawler echoed the sentiment for his constituents in Hudson Valley, New York, arguing that the tax code should reflect the economic reality of high-cost regions.
Yet while the prospect of localized tax relief sounds promising to families in expensive ZIP codes, the proposal is likely to face heavy scrutiny over who will ultimately foot the bill for the corresponding drop in federal revenue.
Here is a breakdown of how this plan could change your take-home pay, which areas stand to benefit, and what this means for the upcoming mid-term election season this fall.
How the bill adjusts the tax brackets
The Cost of Living Tax Cut Act is designed to prevent households in more expensive regions from being pushed into higher tax brackets when their real purchasing power is relatively low compared with the rest of the U.S. If passed, the bill would take effect after December 31, 2026.
The bill’s framework relies on localized data to determine your federal tax liability:
- The index: The bill directs the Secretary of Commerce to use regional price parities (RPPs) to calculate an annual cost-of-living index for metropolitan and rural areas.
- The adjustment: Instead of applying uniform national tax thresholds as it does now, the IRS would expand tax brackets in regions with an above-average cost of living.
- The savings: By widening the lower tax brackets, more of a household’s income would be shielded from higher tax rates.
Here’s the data. According to data from Gillen’s office citing Moody’s Analytics, Long Island’s cost of living at 32% above the national average. Using this formula, a Long Island resident earning $105,000 a year could see up to $1,100 in annual federal tax savings.
Who wins the affordability contest?
An aerial view of a suburban community in Long Island, New York.
(Image credit: Getty Images)
If passed, the Cost of Living Tax Cut Act would provide the most significant relief to major metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) where the local purchasing power of a dollar is typically lower than the national average.
Per the most recent regional economic metrics from the Tax Foundation, the primary beneficiaries of this new bill would live in regions where a typical $100 has the real purchasing power of only $84 to $90. For example:
- California metros: The San Francisco Bay Area (Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose, Santa Clara), Los Angeles, Orange County, San Diego, and Santa Barbara.
- The Pacific Northwest: The greater Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue metro area in Washington.
- Northwest corridor: The broader New York-Newark-Jersey City metro area (spanning NY, NJ, and PA), Boston-Cambridge-Newton (MA/NH), and high-cost zones in Connecticut.
- Hawaii and South Florida: Urban Honolulu and the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach metroplex.
Under the proposed framework, families in the affected ZIP codes would see their tax brackets widened proportionally. Conversely, regions where the cost of living is at or below the national average — like parts of Arkansas, Louisiana, or Ohio — would see no changes to their baseline brackets.
However, federal policy historically requires an offset for targeted tax cuts. Since the legislation bars lawmakers from adjusting tax brackets downward in lower-cost regions, the federal government would have to absorb the resulting deficit, which could eventually lead to spending cuts or the search for alternative federal revenue sources.
The hidden cost of geographic tax cuts
Data published by the Rockefeller Institute of Government reveals that high-wage coastal states subsidize spending in the rest of the nation. For instance, in a single fiscal year, New York residents paid $19.4 billion more to the federal government than the state received, while California taxpayers contributed an extra $72 billion.
So if the federal tax code were to cut taxes for some areas and not others, that might lead to several potential long-term risks:
- A structural drop in federal revenue. Think tanks like the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities often note that targeted tax cuts substantially reduce federal funding for key national obligations like infrastructure, Social Security, and defense.
- Ripple effects in the tax code. Drops in federal revenue could lead to raising baseline tax rates nationwide, implementing broad surtaxes, or risking an increase in the national deficit. This fiscal pressure isn’t unique to the federal government; for example, a state-level structural deficit was one reason Washington enacted a millionaire’s tax on its wealthier residents.
- Porous boundaries and “tax cliffs.” Relying on regional price indexes could create tax spikes right at city borders. For example, a taxpayer living just outside a high-cost metropolitan boundary line who works inside it could face a higher federal tax burden than a neighbor living just one mile away. A similar dynamic already plays out with commuters who live in one state and work in another.
- Increased regulatory burdens. Shifting to an address-based tax system forces the IRS to track, audit, and dynamically update tax brackets across hundreds of MSAs. In an era of $1 billion IRS funding cuts, managing localized federal brackets would heavily strain resources. Furthermore, tax preparation software would need to become more complex, potentially driving up filing costs for everyday taxpayers and increasing the risk of location-reporting errors or geographic fraud.
Bottom line: Will the legislation pass?
Even though the Cost of Living Tax Cut Act addresses a very real financial pressure point for millions of voters, it will most likely face a steep climb to become law.
The proposal must compete against much broader fiscal blueprints, like the 2025 Trump Tax Bill, which focused on making previously enacted individual tax cuts permanent and revamping the federal standard deduction. Adding a localized layer to the IRS tax code could complicate revenue projections and require extensive bipartisan negotiation and spending offsets.
But the bill might just be a taste of what’s to come this election season.
With several congressional seats on the ballot this November and a recent 3.8% inflation surge reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, targeted affordability proposals may take center stage. Even if this specific bill stalls, it highlights a growing legislative focus on how your ZIP code impacts your wallet.
So, before making any sudden moving plans for a cheaper area, wait to see how these fall tax proposals shake out. Your bracket might not change, but your vote could shape future local tax policy.
