Business · State Rankings

Best US States for Project Managers

All 50 states + DC ranked by Project Manager salary. State tax structure noted for take-home math.

Top 10 states by salary
#StateEstimated salaryCost mult.State tax
1District of Columbia$117,6001.20×~5% effective
2California$115,6001.18×~5% effective
3Hawaii$112,7001.15×~5% effective
4New York$112,7001.15×~5% effective
5Alaska$110,7001.13×No state tax
6New Jersey$110,7001.13×~5% effective
7Massachusetts$109,8001.12×~5% effective
8Connecticut$107,8001.10×~5% effective
9Washington$107,8001.10×No state tax
10Maryland$105,8001.08×~5% effective
All 51 states + DC, ranked
#StateSalaryAfter state tax (rough)
1District of Columbia$117,600$86,260
2California$115,600$84,793
3Hawaii$112,700$82,665
4New York$112,700$82,665
5Alaska$110,700$86,733
6New Jersey$110,700$81,198
7Massachusetts$109,800$80,538
8Connecticut$107,800$79,071
9Washington$107,800$84,461
10Maryland$105,800$77,604
11Colorado$102,900$75,477
12New Hampshire$102,900$80,622
13Oregon$102,900$75,477
14Rhode Island$100,900$74,010
15Virginia$100,900$74,010
16Nevada$100,000$78,350
17Arizona$98,000$71,883
18Delaware$98,000$71,883
19Florida$98,000$76,783
20Illinois$98,000$71,883
21Minnesota$98,000$71,883
22Vermont$97,000$71,150
23Maine$95,100$69,756
24Pennsylvania$95,100$69,756
25Texas$95,100$74,511
26Utah$95,100$69,756
27Georgia$92,100$67,555
28North Carolina$92,100$67,555
29Idaho$91,100$66,822
30Michigan$91,100$66,822
31Montana$91,100$66,822
32Wisconsin$91,100$66,822
33Wyoming$91,100$71,377
34New Mexico$90,200$66,162
35North Dakota$90,200$66,162
36South Carolina$90,200$66,162
37Tennessee$90,200$70,672
38Indiana$89,200$65,428
39Kansas$89,200$65,428
40Nebraska$89,200$65,428
41Ohio$89,200$65,428
42South Dakota$89,200$69,888
43Iowa$88,200$64,695
44Louisiana$88,200$64,695
45Missouri$88,200$64,695
46Alabama$86,200$63,228
47Kentucky$86,200$63,228
48Oklahoma$86,200$63,228
49Arkansas$84,300$61,834
50West Virginia$84,300$61,834
51Mississippi$82,300$60,367
After-state-tax estimate uses federal ~14% + FICA 7.65% + state ~5% (or 0% in no-tax states).

Salary range across states

For Project Managers, the estimated median salary ranges from $82,300 in Mississippi to $117,600 in District of Columbia — a 43% range. State-by-state variation reflects local cost of living, employer density, and labor market dynamics.

No-state-tax states

Nine US states have no state income tax: Alaska, Washington, New Hampshire, Nevada, Florida, Texas, Wyoming, Tennessee, South Dakota. For high earners, this can mean $5,000-15,000+ extra per year in take-home pay vs neighboring states with similar gross salaries. New Hampshire taxes interest/dividends only (phasing out).

But: many no-state-tax states make up revenue with higher property tax (Texas) or sales tax (Tennessee). And cost of living varies — Texas urban metros (Austin, Houston) have grown expensive while Florida coastal areas command premium real estate prices.

Cost of living matters more than nominal salary

California pays the most for Project Managers on a nominal basis — but housing in coastal California (SF, LA, San Diego) eats 35-50% of net income for median earners. A Project Manager earning $115,600 in California often has less spendable income than one earning $95,100 in Texas.

Use our cost-of-living comparison tool to see specific city pairs. For state-level take-home, use our state-specific Paycheck Calculator.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Which state pays the most for Project Managers?
Based on cost-of-living-adjusted estimates, District of Columbia pays the most with an estimated median of $117,600/year for Project Managers. High-cost states (CA, NY, MA, HI) tend to top the list because employers compensate for local cost of living.
Do no-state-tax states pay better effective?
Often yes after taxes. Alaska, Washington, New Hampshire, Nevada, Florida have no state income tax. A 5% state tax savings on $100K = $5,000 more take-home. But verify cost of living too — Texas pays well and has no tax, but Houston/Austin housing has risen dramatically.
Why do some states pay so much more?
Three factors: (1) cost of living — coastal states cost 15-25% more, employers adjust pay; (2) employer concentration — CA dominates tech, NY finance, MA biotech; (3) regulatory environment — some states have higher unionization or licensing requirements that increase wages.
Are these salaries net or gross?
Gross — before federal income tax (~14% effective at this income), FICA (7.65%), state income tax (varies), and local taxes if applicable. Use our state-specific Paycheck Calculator for exact take-home in any state.
How does experience affect these numbers?
These are medians — entry-level often runs 25-35% below median, senior roles 40-60%+ above. A senior Project Manager in District of Columbia can easily exceed $176,400, while an entry-level role in a low-cost state might be $57,610.