From Out of State to Mile High City: Your Complete Denver Relocation Guide

Denver gets talked about in relocation circles as if everyone already knows the basics, but the gap between the popular image and the actual lived reality of moving here is wide enough that plenty of people arrive underprepared. The outdoor lifestyle is real. The mountains are genuinely that close. The job market has genuine depth in tech, healthcare, aerospace, and energy. And the city is more expensive than it used to be, more traffic-burdened than the promotional materials suggest, and more weather-eventful than the famous three hundred days of sunshine statistic implies. A useful Denver relocation guide works with that full picture rather than the curated version.

The Cost of Living Reality

Denver's cost of living index sits at roughly 110 in early 2026, which puts it about 10 to 12 percent above the national average. That number obscures a distribution worth understanding. Housing is the category pulling the average up. Most other expenses, utilities, groceries, transportation, come in at or below what people relocating from coastal metros are used to paying.

Median home prices in Denver are currently around $560,000, with desirable neighborhoods within the city proper running higher. For comparison, the national median sits below $430,000. The silver lining for buyers is that inventory has improved from the extreme lows of the 2021 to 2022 period, and well-priced homes in realistic categories have a bit more negotiating room than they did at the peak, though the most desirable neighbourhoods still move quickly.

Renters are in a better position than buyers right now. New apartment supply that came online over the past few years has moderated rent growth substantially. A one-bedroom in a desirable Denver neighbourhood runs roughly $1,700 to $1,800 per month, and two-bedrooms average around $2,300. For people who are relocating without certainty about which neighbourhood fits them best, renting for six to twelve months before buying is genuinely sensible advice rather than a platitude. The variation in character between Denver neighbourhoods is significant enough that people regularly land somewhere different from where they expected to end up.

Colorado's tax environment is straightforward. The state has a flat income tax rate of 4.4 percent, which is relatively low. Property taxes in Denver average around 0.5 percent of assessed value, below the national average. Combined state and local sales tax in Denver sits at approximately 8.81 percent. For people moving from a state without income tax, the calculation shifts. For people moving from California or New York, the overall tax picture is considerably more favourable.

Utilities are a consistent positive surprise for new arrivals. Denver's climate requires neither year-round air conditioning nor particularly heavy heating relative to more extreme climates, and average utility costs for a typical apartment or home run $150 to $200 per month. That's meaningfully below what similar-sized units cost in the South or Northeast.

The Altitude Is Not a Joke

Denver sits at 5,280 feet, and the altitude affects new arrivals in ways that range from mild inconvenience to genuine disruption depending on individual physiology and where you're moving from.

Most people experience some combination of headaches, fatigue, and shortness of breath in the first 24 to 48 hours. This is normal and temporary. The standard mitigation is drinking more water than you think you need, avoiding heavy alcohol consumption in the first few days, and not planning any strenuous physical activity until your body has had time to adjust. The elevation affects how alcohol processes, how quickly you get sunburned, and how your body responds to exertion in ways that take a few weeks to normalise.

If you exercise regularly, expect your performance to drop noticeably for the first two to four weeks before recovering. Runners who are used to a specific pace find they need to slow down. Gym performance drops temporarily. This is not a fitness problem; it's a physiology problem, and it resolves on its own.

The altitude also means that Denver gets significant snowfall, including heavy spring snowstorms that can arrive in April or May. The three hundred days of sunshine is accurate in the aggregate, but those days are distributed throughout the year and not concentrated in summer. What it means practically is that Denver winters have plenty of sunny cold days alongside the snowy ones, and the snow typically melts faster than it would in wetter climates.

Neighbourhoods Worth Understanding Before You Choose

Denver's neighbourhoods have genuine character differences that affect the experience of living there significantly, and choosing one without understanding the trade-offs is one of the most common mistakes new arrivals make.

LoDo and Downtown are central, walkable, and well-served by transit, which makes them attractive to newcomers who don't yet have a sense of the city's geography. They're also among the priciest options, primarily apartment-based, and the nightlife and activity that makes them appealing in the evenings can make them less peaceful for people who want quiet.

Capitol Hill and the Uptown area adjacent to it are denser, more urban, and have a mix of older apartment buildings and newer construction at price points that are lower than LoDo. The neighbourhood has character and walkability but also some of the parking and noise issues that come with urban density.

The Highlands, particularly LoHi, has become one of the most sought-after neighbourhoods in the city. Good restaurants, a mix of Victorian houses and modern infill development, and easy access to downtown via the pedestrian bridge over the Platte River. It's expensive relative to comparable square footage elsewhere in the metro.

Washington Park, referred to locally as Wash Park, is the neighbourhood that wins consistently with people who want a residential feel, access to a large and genuinely beautiful park, and relatively family-friendly surroundings. It's quieter than the central neighbourhoods and has better school options in the immediate area.

Aurora and Lakewood are the metro-area suburbs that offer meaningfully more space and lower prices than the city proper, at the cost of longer commutes and a less walkable environment. For families prioritising school districts and square footage over urban access, these are worth including in the housing search.

The Job Market

Denver's economy has diversified considerably over the past two decades and is no longer dependent on the commodity cycles that previously made Colorado employment more volatile.

The technology sector has grown into a genuine pillar of the Denver economy. Companies including Palantir, Arrow Electronics, and a substantial number of mid-sized tech firms are headquartered here, and the Denver office has become a meaningful option for remote workers whose employers have established footprint in the region. The aerospace industry, anchored by Lockheed Martin's presence in the metro area, employs significant numbers of engineers and technical professionals. Healthcare is a major employer through systems including UCHealth, SCL Health, and Children's Hospital Colorado. Clean energy and renewables have become increasingly significant as Colorado has committed to ambitious emissions reduction targets.

For people relocating without a job already secured, the six-to-twelve-month rental strategy mentioned above is even more relevant. Commute patterns in Denver are real and significant, and knowing where you'll be working before committing to a neighbourhood makes the housing decision considerably easier.

Getting Around

Denver has an RTD light rail and bus rapid transit network that serves downtown and many of the inner suburbs reasonably well. For people who work downtown and live along the rail lines, car-free urban living is genuinely possible and a not-insignificant number of Denver residents manage it.

For most other patterns of life in Denver, a car is effectively necessary. The city's geography spreads across a large area, and the outdoor activities that many people move to Denver specifically to access, skiing, hiking, camping in Rocky Mountain National Park, are almost entirely car-dependent. The mountains are 45 minutes to an hour from the city centre by car and substantially longer or inaccessible by any other means.

The highway system, I-25 and I-70 in particular, carries significant commuter traffic and can move slowly during peak hours in both directions. The I-70 corridor west toward the ski resorts on winter weekends is famously congested and the congestion has become worse rather than better as the metro area has grown. Planning around this rather than being surprised by it is part of adjusting to Denver's rhythms.

When to Move

Late spring and early fall are the most reliable timing for Denver relocations in terms of weather. May offers mild temperatures and the best chance of avoiding both late-season snowstorms and the heat of summer. September and October are arguably the best months of the year in Denver, with warm days, cool nights, fall colour in the mountain foothills, and stable conditions for moving trucks.

Summer moves are logistically straightforward from a weather standpoint but face two problems: high demand for moving companies with corresponding price increases, and genuine heat in July and August that makes physically moving boxes into a new home less than pleasant. Winter moves carry the risk of significant snowstorms that can delay or complicate logistics, though they typically come with better pricing from moving companies.

Denver rewards people who arrive with realistic expectations, a plan for the altitude adjustment, and a genuine interest in what the city and the broader state have to offer. The version of Denver that exists in the minds of people who haven't been here yet is often both more and less than the reality. The mountains are every bit as accessible as advertised. The housing market requires more budget than most people estimate from afar. And the city has a pace and a character that most people who make the move end up genuinely glad they chose.

This Denver relocation guide covers the fundamentals, but the specifics of any individual move involve enough variables that doing your own research on the current state of specific neighbourhoods and the job market in your field is always worth the time before you commit to anything.