Moving from Chicago to Omaha? Here's the Honest Comparison
I want to be upfront with you about Chicago: I genuinely like that city. Every time I've visited, I've come back a little jealous. The architecture alone is worth the trip. The L train rattling overhead, the lakefront stretching farther than you can see, a proper Italian beef sandwich with giardiniera — Chicago has a version of urban life that very few cities in the world can match. And if you're a Cubs fan, well, Wrigley Field is a cathedral.
So I'm not going to pretend this is a no-brainer. Chicago is legitimately great at a lot of things.
But here's what I hear consistently from the people who reach out to me from Chicago: they're priced out. Not just of the city itself — but of the suburbs they actually want to live in. Naperville, Elmhurst, Downers Grove, Lake Forest — the places with the schools and the neighborhoods and the commute access they're looking for — are running $450K to $700K+ for a family home. And on top of that, Chicago ranked as the single worst city in the entire United States for traffic congestion in 2025. Not second. First. Worse than New York. Worse than Los Angeles.
That combination — high housing costs and the worst traffic in the country — is what sends people to Omaha. And when they get here, most of them don't go back. Let's break down why, honestly. I've also written similar comparisons for Omaha vs Dallas, Omaha vs Denver, Omaha vs Austin, and Omaha vs Nashville if you're cross-shopping.
The Quick Numbers: Side by Side
| Category | Omaha, NE | Chicago, IL |
|---|---|---|
| Metro Population | ~975,000 | ~9.5 million (metro) |
| Median Home Price | $306,100 (Q3 2025, Redfin) | ~$390K city / $450K–$700K+ top suburbs (Feb 2026) |
| Avg Days on Market | ~10 days | ~65–67 days (Jan 2026, Chicago REALTORS®) |
| Cost of Living vs. National | ~8–10% below avg | ~15–20% above national avg (city); suburbs vary |
| State Income Tax | Nebraska: 4.55% top rate (dropping to 3.99% in 2027) | Illinois: 4.95% flat rate |
| Effective Property Tax Rate | ~1.7% | ~1.88–2.07% statewide; higher in Cook County |
| Traffic Congestion Rank | Not in top 25 | #1 worst in the US, #2 in the world (INRIX 2025) |
| Hours Lost to Traffic/Year | Negligible | 112 hours per driver (~$2,063 in lost time) |
| Avg Commute Time | ~20 minutes | ~34 minutes (with far worse peak-hour conditions) |
| Winter | Cold, occasional snow and ice | Cold, lake-effect snow, brutal wind chill off Lake Michigan |
| Summer Highs | Mid-80s°F | Mid-80s°F with higher humidity near the lake |
Housing: The Number That Starts Most Conversations
The most common thing I hear from people reaching out from Chicago is some version of: "We make good money and we still can't afford the house we want." That's not a personal failure — it's just what the Chicago market does to families at almost every income level.
The median home price in the city of Chicago is around $390K as of early 2026. But the city itself isn't where most families with kids are looking. They're looking at suburbs: Naperville, Elmhurst, Downers Grove, Wheaton, Libertyville. And in those suburbs — the ones with the school ratings and neighborhood feel that rival Omaha's western suburbs — you're looking at $450K to $700K+ for a comparable family home. The most sought-after school districts in the Chicago collar counties push even higher.
In Omaha, that same family budget buys a newer home in Elkhorn, Papillion, or Gretna with highly rated schools, a reasonable commute, and money left over. The median in Omaha is $306,100. Here's a real breakdown of what different budgets get you in Omaha.
$80K–$100K+ less on a city median comparison — and $150K–$400K less if you're comparing Omaha's top suburbs to Chicago's equivalent collar counties. That gap is equity, not just a payment difference. See what your budget gets you in Omaha →
The L train system is genuinely excellent. If you live and work near an L line, you can commute without a car. That's a real lifestyle advantage that Omaha simply doesn't offer.
Traffic: This Is Where Chicago Gets Painful
I don't want to pile on, but the data here is too significant to gloss over. Chicago ranked as the single most traffic-congested city in the United States in 2025, according to INRIX's Global Traffic Scorecard. Not second. First. And second worst in the entire world, behind only Istanbul.
Chicago drivers lost an average of 112 hours sitting in traffic in 2025 — a 10% increase from the year before — at an estimated cost of $2,063 per driver in lost time. During the worst parts of the morning commute, speeds on downtown last-mile routes dropped to just 9 mph. The Kennedy (I-90/94), the Dan Ryan, and the Eisenhower are legitimately some of the most congested corridors in the country, and five Chicago highway segments appear in the national top 10 worst roads list.
If you live near an L stop and work downtown, you can sidestep a lot of this. But if your life involves driving — kids in the suburbs, a job that isn't downtown, any errand that requires a car — Chicago traffic is a daily tax on your time and mental bandwidth.
Omaha's average commute is around 20 minutes. I live here. I can get from most parts of the city to most other parts in under 25 minutes on a normal day. That's not marketing copy — it's just what it's like in a mid-sized city with a functional road network. Over a working year, the difference between Chicago's commute and Omaha's is the equivalent of getting weeks of your life back.
It's not close. Chicago is the worst traffic city in the country. Omaha doesn't register. For families who drive, this difference alone meaningfully changes daily quality of life.
The L train, Metra commuter rail, and Divvy bike share give Chicago residents genuine car-free options. Omaha is a driving city — that's just the reality.
Taxes: Nebraska Has a Genuine Edge Here
Unlike the Texas comparison, both states have income tax — so there's no dramatic no-income-tax advantage on either side. But the numbers still favor Nebraska, and the gap is growing.
Illinois has a flat 4.95% income tax rate on all taxable income. Nebraska's top rate is 4.55% in 2026, dropping to 3.99% in 2027 as part of a legislated phase-down. On a $100,000 income, that's roughly $400–$900 per year moving in Nebraska's favor right now, widening as the Nebraska rate continues to fall.
Property taxes are comparable at the statewide level — Illinois averages around 1.88–2.07%, Nebraska around 1.7% — but Nebraska's LB 34 school tax credit (passed 2024) refunds roughly 30% of school district taxes paid, meaningfully lowering the effective rate for most Omaha homeowners. Cook County property taxes can run above the Illinois statewide average. Here's the full breakdown on how Omaha property taxes actually work.
Cleanliness and Day-to-Day Livability
This one is harder to quantify but comes up in almost every conversation I have with people who've visited Omaha from Chicago. Chicago is a world-class city in a lot of ways — but it's also a very large, very old city, and parts of it show that. Some L stations, downtown corridors, and dense neighborhoods carry the wear that comes with age and the sheer volume of people moving through every day. That's not a criticism; it's the physics of a city of 2.7 million.
Omaha is noticeably cleaner. The streets are maintained, the parks are well-kept, and the suburban corridors feel newer because a lot of them are newer. People who move here from Chicago consistently mention this within the first few weeks — not as a knock on Chicago, but as a genuine surprise about Omaha. The trail system, the parks, and the riverfront give Omaha an outdoor livability that holds up well against cities twice its size.
Schools: Excellent Quality at a Fraction of the Access Cost
Chicago's collar county school districts — Naperville 203, Downers Grove 99, Lake Forest, New Trier — are among the best in the country. That's not in dispute. But the homes those districts attach to start at $500K to $1M+. You're paying a significant premium for access, and it's baked into every comparable listing price in the area.
Omaha's western suburbs — Elkhorn, Millard, Papillion-La Vista, Gretna, Bennington — are genuinely excellent school districts. They're not New Trier, but they're competitive with the best Midwestern districts and significantly more accessible. You can buy a home in Elkhorn's school district for $300K–$500K. The equivalent district access in the Chicago suburbs starts at double that. Here's the full breakdown of Omaha's school districts.
Excellent suburban districts at $300K–$500K vs. equivalent Chicago-area districts at $600K–$1M+. The quality gap is smaller than the price gap by a wide margin. See Omaha's school districts →
New Trier, Naperville 203, and Lake Forest are among the genuinely best public school districts in the country. If absolute ceiling matters more than value, Chicago's collar counties have Omaha beat.
Jobs and Economy
Chicago's economy is enormous and genuinely diversified — finance (CME Group, Morningstar, major banking), healthcare (Northwestern Medicine, Rush, Advocate), a growing tech corridor, manufacturing, and one of the busiest transportation hubs in the world. If you're in a specialized field or climbing a corporate ladder at a major institution, Chicago's scale is a real advantage that Omaha can't replicate.
Omaha punches above its weight. Berkshire Hathaway, TD Ameritrade (now Schwab), Union Pacific, Mutual of Omaha, and UNMC — one of the top biomedical research campuses in the country — anchor a stable, finance-and-healthcare-heavy economy. Unemployment consistently tracks below the national average. For most people, Omaha's job market is more than sufficient — and the cost of living makes an Omaha salary go considerably further than the same number in the Chicago suburbs.
Lifestyle, Food, and Culture
I'll be honest: Chicago wins on scale. It's one of the great American cities — the Art Institute, the Museum of Science and Industry, the Shedd Aquarium, Wrigley Field, the United Center. The food scene is exceptional in a way that goes well beyond deep dish. And yes, an Italian beef sandwich done right is one of the genuinely great pleasures of Midwestern life. I've never had one in Omaha that touches what you get in Chicago. That's just the truth.
What Omaha offers is different. The Old Market, Blackstone, Benson, and Dundee have a restaurant and neighborhood scene that consistently surprises people who arrive expecting a sleepy Midwestern city. The College World Series is one of the best sporting events in the country. Husker football is a religion. The trail system and outdoor access — Zorinsky Lake, the Keystone Trail, the Missouri riverfront — gives Omaha an outdoor livability that Chicago's lakefront matches but most of its suburbs don't. And you can get everywhere in 20 minutes. Here's what daily life in Omaha actually looks like.
What Omaha doesn't have: the density, the variety, or the big-city energy that comes with 9.5 million people. That's a real trade-off. Most families who make the move find they trade quantity for ease — and that they don't miss the quantity as much as they expected.
Who Should Choose Omaha
- Families priced out of Chicago's good suburbs — if your budget is $400K–$600K and you can't find what you want in the collar counties, Omaha's west side is worth a serious look
- Anyone who drives to work and has had enough of the Kennedy or the Dan Ryan at rush hour — 112 hours a year is real time you don't get back
- Remote workers who want Midwestern practicality without big-city friction — Omaha's cost of living makes remote income go significantly further
- Finance, insurance, and healthcare professionals — the employer base is deep and stable relative to cost of living
- Families who prioritize outdoor access and neighborhood livability — Omaha's trail system and parks are genuinely underrated
- People who want to build equity fast — buying at $306K in a 10-day market is a very different financial trajectory than buying at $500K+ in a 65-day one
Who Should Choose Chicago
- People who genuinely use what a world-class city offers — the museums, the lakefront, Wrigley, the food scene — and are willing to pay for consistent access to it
- Professionals in specialized fields (finance, healthcare systems, tech, law) who need Chicago's depth of employers and career mobility
- Car-free or low-car households who rely on transit — the L is excellent and Omaha has no equivalent
- Cubs fans. Wrigley Field is a genuinely special place and I'll freely admit that.
- People whose family, community, and roots are in Chicago — a factor no cost-of-living calculator can quantify
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
Chicago is one of the great American cities and I mean that genuinely — not as a setup. The lakefront is worth a long weekend. The Italian beef is worth the trip. If you love what big cities offer and have the income and patience to make it work, Chicago rewards you for it.
But for families who are priced out of the suburbs they actually want, who are losing 112 hours a year in traffic, and whose housing budget keeps falling short — Omaha solves most of those problems at once. The home you want is achievable here. The commute is manageable. The schools are excellent. And you might be surprised how much of what you loved about city life translates to a smaller, cleaner, faster version of it.
If you want to run the actual numbers on what your specific budget and situation looks like in Omaha, I'm happy to do that. You can also browse our full Omaha relocation guide, take the neighborhood quiz, or just reach out directly.
Thinking about making the move from Chicago?
I help people relocate to Omaha from all over the country — including a lot of people from the Chicago area. Let's talk through your situation: budget, neighborhood fit, timeline, and what the numbers actually look like for you.
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