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    Home » I cut my housing costs by 54 percent by downsizing in an expensive city. Here’s How I Reached Financial Freedom Without Leaving California
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    I cut my housing costs by 54 percent by downsizing in an expensive city. Here’s How I Reached Financial Freedom Without Leaving California

    Smart WealthhabitsBy Smart WealthhabitsMay 23, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    I cut my housing costs by 54 percent by downsizing in an expensive city. Here's How I Reached Financial Freedom Without Leaving California
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    © Canva | Getty Images Signature and Drazen from Jasper_

    aubrey williams arrived financial freedom In Santa Barbara, California, one of the most expensive real estate markets in America, we packed up and moved to Tennessee. On the Catching Up to FI podcast, he described the step that did most of the work: “The people who built it were so far out of the league of my acquaintances that it was OK to save money by driving an old car.” The cultural cachet let him do something that most high-income people in status-heavy zip codes refuse to do. He shrank.

    After her divorce, Williams moved from a 3-bedroom house costing $3,500 a month to a 1-bedroom apartment costing $1,595 in a much less desirable part of town. This is a 54% reduction in their largest expenditure, in a state where the cost of living index is near 111, second only to the District of Columbia. The stakes for the reader are simple: If you treat your zip code as fixed and your rent as fixed, you have surrendered the lever that matters most.

    Verdict: Math beats tricks

    Williams is right, and the arithmetic is inexcusable. Geographic arbitrage gets the marketing, but place-based arbitrage usually wins on a risk-adjusted basis because it doesn’t force you to give up your job, your network, or the extent of your earnings. Consider his housing line alone. Dropping the $3,500 rent to $1,595 frees up about $1,900 per month. Invested monthly for 20 years at a 7% real return, that single decision works out to about $1 million in today’s dollars. No second job, no extra hustle, no relocation.

    Now layer in income. Williams increased his salary from $60,000 to $240,000 Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT | LMT price prediction), and when the company told him they “only cover the cost of living,” not the cost of real estate, he backed out and secured more than $100,000 to move to California. A geographic arbiter fleeing to a cheaper state typically takes a pay cut to do so. Williams kept California’s salary and cut California’s expenses. This is the business that most people go to the back of.

    Food Line also tells the same story. That went from $1,500 a month on groceries and $700 to $800 at restaurants to $300 to $400 on groceries and $100 to $200 at restaurants. Pile the food savings on the housing deduction and you’re looking at meaningful monthly cash flow in a state where per capita income is $86,378 but real purchasing power drops to $78,015 after adjusting for prices.

    The variable that decides it: how much of your budget is housing

    The lever only works when accommodation dominates your spending. If you already rent a modest place and your housing line is 20% of take home pay, the 54% deduction probably frees up a few hundred dollars a month, and the math becomes simple. If housing is 40% to 50% of your budget, which is common in coastal metros, cutting that same percentage eliminates life-changing cash flow. Check your own ratios before deciding whether Williams’ playbook fits.

    The trade-off he openly names is the quality of space. Going to a less desirable part of town is the price of admission. They redefined it: For children ages 6 and 4, the smaller footprint meant that they “We weren’t alone in a bedroom watching a screen. Everything we did was together in the living room, whether it was playing with Legos or watching movies or art projects.” That framing removes the emotional objection that derails most downsize plans.

    what to do this week

    1. Pull out your last three months’ statements and calculate accommodation as a percentage of take home pay. If it’s above 30%, a Williams-style cut is the highest-leverage move on your board.
    2. Determine the prices of one-bedroom or smaller rentals in nearby neighborhoods that you currently dismiss. Calculate the monthly delta and multiply by 240 months to see the 20-year yield.
    3. If you are employed, negotiate on the income side before cutting the expense side. Williams received over $100,000 for rejecting the first answer. Ask what cost-of-living adjustments, retention bonuses, or relocation premiums your role supports.
    4. Audit groceries and restaurants for a month. Williams’ $1,500 grocery bill dropped by $300 to $400. Most of that difference is a matter of planning, not a lack.

    Consumer sentiment near 53.3 bearish zoneAnd housing starts at 1.47 million units and going soft, macro is not going to save your budget. The lever inside your leash is what you control.

    California city costs cut Downsizing Expensive Financial Freedom Heres Housing leaving percent reached
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