Best city for remote work? Kansas City, MO

B
Score
57/100
Rank #55 (top 200 cities)
Data: ACS 2023 (5-year)

Kansas City is a strong match for remote work if you value typical rent (2br), plus broadband subscription. Overall, it performs well across the scorecard (#55 of 200). One thing to keep in mind is median household income.

Methodology · Sources · MO rankings

Scope note (city proper)

This page scores the incorporated city limits (Census “Place”), not the metro area. That’s why some cities can look very different vs their surrounding region.

Why Kansas City ranks here

  • Typical rent (2BR): $1,211/mo (16% lower than the national median; better for this metric).
  • Broadband subscription: 89% (2% lower than the national median; worse for this metric).
  • Work-from-home share: 15% (20% higher than the national median; better for this metric).

Watch-outs

  • Median household income: $67,449 (11% lower than the national median; worse for this metric).
  • Commute 45+ min share: 7% (40% lower than the national median; better for this metric).

City snapshot

Basic demographics from ACS 2023 (city proper).

Population
508,233
Estimated total population (ACS).
Male vs female
Male 48%Female 52%

Key metrics

Values shown are from ACS 2023. National medians are computed across the ranked city set.

Typical rent (2BR)
$1,211/mo
National median: $1,441/mo
Work-from-home share
15%
National median: 12%
Broadband subscription
89%
National median: 91%
Median household income
$67,449
National median: $75,598
Bachelor’s+ rate
38%
National median: 35%
Commute 45+ min share
7%
National median: 11%

Score breakdown (by category)

Category scores are 0–100 and summarize groups of metrics used in the final score.

City
National median (dataset)
Affordability
Typical 2BR rent and housing pressure.
83/100
Connectivity
Broadband availability as a practical remote-work proxy.
89/100
Workforce
Remote-work adoption and human-capital signals.
25/100
Comfort
Commute friction and climate comfort.
93/100

Education (age 25+)

Share of adults by attainment (ACS).

8%
Less than HS
54%
HS / Some college
24%
Bachelor’s
14%
Advanced

Work style

WFH vs not WFH (ACS).

15%
Work from home
85%
Not WFH

Internet access

Household broadband subscription (ACS).

89%
Broadband
11%
No broadband

Scorecard breakdown

Bars are rescaled to 0–100 for readability (percentage metrics use their actual percent).

City
National median (dataset)
Typical rent (2BR)
National median $1,441/mo
$1,211/mo
Broadband subscription
National median 91%
89%
Work-from-home share
National median 12%
15%
Median household income
National median $75,598
$67,449
Bachelor’s+ rate
National median 35%
38%
Commute 45+ min share
National median 11%
7%

Similar cities (by score)

FAQ

What is Kansas City’s remote work score and rank?
Kansas City, MO scores B (57/100) and ranks #55 out of the top 200 US cities in this dataset.
Is this based on Kansas City city proper or the metro area?
City proper (incorporated place). This uses Census ‘Place’ boundaries, not the metro area. Metro-level rankings can differ a lot from the city itself.
What is the population of Kansas City, MO?
Population is about 508,233 (ACS 2023, city proper).
What is the male vs female split in Kansas City, MO?
About 48% male and 52% female (ACS 2023).
What is a typical monthly rent in Kansas City, MO?
Typical rent (2BR) is $1,211/mo (national median: $1,441/mo).
What share of workers work from home in Kansas City, MO?
Work-from-home share is 15% (national median: 12%).
How common is broadband internet in Kansas City, MO?
Broadband subscription is 89% of households (national median: 91%).
What does the education mix look like in Kansas City, MO?
Among adults 25+, the shares are roughly: less than HS 8%, HS/some college 54%, bachelor’s 24%, advanced 14%.
Where does this data come from for Kansas City, MO?
Metrics are from Census ACS 2023 5-year estimates (city proper / incorporated place), with optional NOAA climate normals when available.

Note: Scores are informational and depend on data coverage and methodology. Always validate against your personal constraints (job, neighborhood, commute, safety, schools, healthcare).