Cost of Living
per year
per month
How Spring Hill's prices compare to the US city average across major spending categories.
How far does your salary go in Spring Hill?
Your $100,000 in Spring Hill has the same purchasing power as $93,127 in the average US city. You'd need $6,873 more here to maintain that standard of living.
Demographics and workforce data from the US Census ACS 5-Year.
bachelor's or higher
Climate, safety, and walkability indicators.
See a side-by-side breakdown of cost of living, housing, and salaries.
Popular comparisons
Sorted by affordability — most affordable first.
Within 10 points of Spring Hill's cost index of 107, sorted by closest match.
People moving to Spring Hill usually have at least one specific reason. Most of them line up with what the data shows: wage income stays untaxed at the state level, year-round warm weather, plus 2 more things worth knowing. Here's what's actually on the table.
Wage income in Spring Hill isn't taxed at the state level. Florida is one of the few US states with no income tax, which is one of the reasons people relocating from high-tax states tend to land here in the first place.
A jacket, not a parka — winters in Spring Hill average 55°F. Summer ramps up to about 91°F, which is real heat, but the rest of the year is the kind of weather you'd pay good money to visit.
Spring Hill reports roughly 1,226 crime incidents per 100,000 residents, well under the US average of about 3,500 per 100k. As always, citywide numbers paper over real differences between neighborhoods — but the broader trend here is on the calmer end of the US distribution.
Spring Hill's air quality index averages about 41 — comfortably in the EPA's "good" range. No daily ritual of checking the AQI before going for a run, no smoky-day plans, no surprise asthma flare-ups for the kids. The kind of background condition you notice mostly by its absence.
Reasons are pulled from Spring Hill's actual data — Census ACS, BLS, BEA, NOAA, EPA AQS, FBI, and Walk Score. We don't list positives that aren't supported by the numbers, which is why different cities show different sections.
Almost never. Spring Hill's winter average of about 55°F is too warm for snow most years. A measurable snowfall is the kind of event that closes schools and gets photographed for the local paper.
Barely. Winter in Spring Hill averages around 55°F — short, mild, mostly an excuse to break out a light jacket. Some plants don't even drop their leaves.
Genuinely hot. Summer in Spring Hill averages about 91°F, and peak afternoons run well over a hundred. Outdoor plans move to mornings and evenings; AC is the most-used appliance in the house.
Zone 10, give or take a half-zone. Spring Hill's typical winter low puts it in that band on the USDA Hardiness map, which is what nurseries label plants against. Use Zone 10 as your starting filter; the USDA's interactive map is more precise for borderline cases.
Spring Hill sits at about 49 feet (15 m) above sea level — low-lying, but with enough cushion that day-to-day life isn't affected by ocean levels.
Atlantic basin storms can form from June 1 to November 30, but the serious ones cluster in August, September, and the first half of October. Residents of Spring Hill learn the season's rhythm fast: watch the cone, board up when it's the call, and don't shrug off the slow-mover storms — those are usually the ones that flood.
By the numbers, yes. Spring Hill reports roughly 1,226 crime incidents per 100,000 residents — well under the US average of about 3,500 per 100k. The big caveat applies as always: every city has neighborhoods that look nothing like the citywide average. But the citywide average here is genuinely good.
Roughly average. Spring Hill's cost-of-living index is 107, putting it in the band where rent, groceries, and utilities track the national norm. Not a bargain, not a premium.
Not really — Spring Hill is built around the car. Its Walk Score of 2 out of 100 means almost every errand is a drive. Living without a car is technically possible but real work; most residents wouldn't try it.
Roughly $75,166 a year would match the lifestyle of someone earning $70,000 in an average US city. That's a starting point, not a target — negotiate higher when you can. Median rent in Spring Hill runs about $1,223/mo — keeping housing under 30% of gross income points to a similar floor on what you'd want to earn.