About 40% of our buyers in 2026 are relocating from out of state. The pattern is consistent: California (still the biggest source), Washington, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and Texas. They're coming for a combination of cost, lifestyle, and a less crowded version of the Intermountain West. Most don't regret the move — but the ones who have the best experience are the ones who did their homework before arriving. This is what we wish every relocating buyer knew.
The honest version of why people move here
Idaho Falls isn't selling a fantasy. It's a ~65,000-person regional hub (about 150K metro), dominated by the Idaho National Laboratory (INL), with a strong secondary healthcare sector, a working agricultural economy around it, and access to some of the best outdoor recreation in North America.
What attracts relocators:
- Cost of living — roughly 40–55% lower than California metros, 25–35% lower than Seattle/Denver
- Housing — $415K median vs. $900K+ in equivalent Utah/California markets
- Taxes — Idaho flat 5.8% state income tax, low property tax (~0.7%), no state-level exit or wealth tax
- Outdoor access — world-class fly fishing, 90 min to Yellowstone, four ski mountains within 2 hours
- Low crime — overall violent crime is 30% below the U.S. average
- Community — family-oriented, strong churches and civic culture, low divorce rate, high volunteering rates
What the Zillow relocation lists don't mention:
- Winters are cold — average January low ~13°F, 30–40 inches of snow, occasional subzero cold snaps
- The region is conservative — politically, religiously (strong LDS presence), and culturally. This is a feature for many relocators and a bug for others; be honest with yourself about fit
- Amenities are regional-hub scale — good restaurants exist but aren't abundant; no Whole Foods (Albertsons and Broulim's are the main options); no major airport (flights route through SLC or DEN)
- The job market is narrow outside INL and healthcare — if you're in tech, finance, or creative industries, remote work is often the path
Cost of living: real comparisons, not estimates
We pulled comparisons from 2026 data for a family of four with two working adults:
Annual cost of living (family of 4, ~$150K household income)
- Idaho Falls: ~$78,000/yr (before housing)
- Boise: ~$88,000 (+13%)
- Denver: ~$102,000 (+31%)
- Seattle: ~$118,000 (+51%)
- San Diego: ~$132,000 (+69%)
- SF Bay Area: ~$148,000 (+90%)
Sources: BLS, Numbeo, Idaho Falls utility providers, SR Two70 client data
The biggest delta is housing. A $1.2M Bay Area starter home is a $415K mid-tier Idaho Falls home — and often a nicer, newer one with land. On monthly cash flow, this single change saves typical Bay Area families $4,000–$6,000 per month.
The job market reality
Idaho Falls' economy is more concentrated than most metros. Understand where you'd fit:
Idaho National Laboratory (INL) — ~6,000 direct jobs
Engineering, nuclear research, physics, materials science, cybersecurity, facility operations. Most positions are federal contractor roles (Battelle Energy Alliance is the primary operator). Competitive salaries, strong benefits, pension pathways. Workforce is expanding through 2030 because of nuclear modernization initiatives.
Healthcare — ~5,000 jobs
EIRMC (Level II trauma center) and Mountain View Hospital are the two major systems. Nursing, physician, technician, and admin roles are all in steady demand.
Other major employers
Melaleuca (corporate HQ, 2,000+ employees), local government, Idaho Falls School District, small-to-mid manufacturing, and a growing retail/hospitality sector downtown.
Remote work
A meaningful share of our relocating buyers are remote workers — tech, finance, consulting, creative fields. Internet is fast (gigabit fiber in most Ammon subdivisions and NE Idaho Falls, 500 Mbps widely available). Cost of living makes remote salaries go further than almost anywhere else in the western U.S.
Neighborhoods by relocator type
INL engineers and technical professionals
Recommended: Ammon (D93 schools, 15 min to INL), Taylor Crossing (newer homes, $430K–$620K), Sandcreek Commons.
Avoid: West Idaho Falls (commute is longer in winter, schools are weaker).
Healthcare workers
Recommended: NE Idaho Falls (walkable to EIRMC, greenbelt access), Iona (quieter, 10 min to both hospitals), Lincoln Heights.
Retirees and empty nesters
Recommended: Greenbelt-adjacent NE Idaho Falls, Lincoln Heights, single-level homes in older Ammon, 55+ communities in south Idaho Falls.
Remote workers with families
Recommended: Ammon or Iona (D93 schools, new construction, fiber internet), or character homes in NE Idaho Falls if walkability matters.
Investors and landlords
Recommended: West Idaho Falls (best rental yields, 7–9% gross), Rexburg (BYU-Idaho student housing demand), south Idaho Falls older neighborhoods.
How to buy from another state
We close 15–20 remote purchases per year. The workflow is refined:
- Pre-approval first — local lender we trust, gets you a firm pre-approval letter
- Intake call (30–60 min) — we talk through priorities, lifestyle, commute, budget, must-haves vs. nice-to-haves
- Shortlist of 15–25 homes — we send matched listings with notes, daily, as new ones hit the market
- Virtual tours — FaceTime walkthroughs for the top 3–5 homes. We walk through at your pace, answer questions in real time, send follow-up photos and video of specific concerns
- FPV or drone video for serious contenders — you see the whole property, lot, and neighborhood context
- Offer — we advise on strategy, your agent handles contingencies, inspection periods, and timeline
- Remote inspection — inspector sends live video during inspection, you can ask questions mid-inspection. We meet the inspector on-site if you want someone local present
- Remote notarization — closing documents executed via RON (Remote Online Notarization) or mobile notary in your current state. Wire transfer for down payment and closing costs
- Keys on arrival — we meet you at the home the day you arrive with keys and a local-resource package (doctors, mechanic, grocery, utilities, etc.)
We recommend at least one in-person visit if schedule allows, but it's not required. Buyers who've bought sight-unseen almost always report the experience matched or exceeded expectations — because the virtual tour process is thorough and because Idaho Falls homes tend to be honest (not the staged-fantasy marketing you see in some metros).
Timeline: how long does the whole move take?
- Typical decision-to-closing: 60–120 days (faster if you're pre-approved and decisive)
- From first inquiry to first tour: 1–2 weeks
- Home selection: 2–6 weeks (depends on inventory and your criteria)
- Contract to close: 30–45 days
- Move-in coordination: 7–30 days after close
Schools — the honest version
Southeast Idaho has two main school districts serving the Idaho Falls metro:
- Idaho Falls School District 91 (D91) — older district, established reputation, covers Idaho Falls city proper. Strong arts/music programs. Idaho Falls High School graduates go to top universities. Some schools stronger than others — verify feed pattern for any address.
- Bonneville Joint School District 93 (D93) — serves Ammon, Iona, Ucon, and east bench areas. Consistently higher state test scores, newer facilities. The main reason Ammon home prices run 10–15% above equivalent D91 homes.
Private and charter options exist: American Heritage Charter, White Pine Charter, and several religious schools. Homeschooling is legal, popular, and well-supported in Idaho.
BYU-Idaho is 30 minutes north in Rexburg — a major LDS-affiliated university.
Weather: what you need to know
- Winter (Dec–Mar): average low 13°F, high 31°F. Snow Oct–Apr, 30–40 inches/yr. Dry cold — doesn't feel like equivalent midwest temps. Roads are well-plowed and residents are winter-competent.
- Spring (Apr–May): mudseason then rapid warming. River runoff peaks in late May.
- Summer (Jun–Aug): 80–92°F highs, 50–58°F nights. Low humidity, minimal rain, long days (9pm sunsets).
- Fall (Sep–Nov): crisp, colorful, often the best weather of the year. First frost usually late September.
Homes here have efficient gas heating and most have central AC (less critical than in Boise, but common in newer builds).
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Idaho Falls a good place to move to?
For the right person, yes — regional hub, diversified economy, strong schools, world-class outdoor access, $415K median housing. Tradeoffs: cold winters, conservative culture, regional-hub-scale amenities. Be honest about fit.
How does the cost of living compare to California?
Roughly 40–55% lower overall. Biggest delta is housing — $415K Idaho Falls ≈ $1.2M–$1.5M Bay Area. Idaho's flat 5.8% income tax is well below California's top rate. No state exit tax.
Can I buy a home here without visiting first?
Yes, we do this regularly. Virtual/FPV video tours, FaceTime walkthroughs, remote inspection (live video), remote notarization, wire transfer. In-person visit recommended but not required.
What is the job market like?
INL is largest employer (~6K direct, 20K supply chain) — engineering/physics/nuclear/cybersecurity. Healthcare second-largest. Remote work increasingly viable given fiber internet. Unemployment under 3.5%.
What are winters like?
Cold and dry. Avg January low 13°F, 30–40 inches of snow. Well-plowed roads, efficient gas heating, low humidity makes cold feel milder than midwest. Summers are 80–92°F with cool nights and low humidity.
Where should I live as a relocating family?
Top picks: Ammon (D93, $410K–$600K), NE Idaho Falls (greenbelt, $450K–$750K), Taylor Crossing (modern family, $430K–$680K), Iona/Ucon (rural-feel D93, $380K–$600K). INL engineers typically in Ammon; healthcare in NE Idaho Falls/Iona.
Our relocation process
If you're considering a move to Idaho Falls, the right first step is a phone call — not signing anything. We offer a free 30–60 minute relocation consultation: no obligation, no commission agreement required. We walk you through neighborhoods, answer real questions about life here, and if it makes sense, we start the home search together.
Text or call Grant directly at (208) 499-4016 or email [email protected]. For California-specific relocation, see our California to Idaho Falls guide.
Ready to Make Your Move in Southeast Idaho?
Whether you're buying, selling, or just exploring, our team is here to guide you with expertise and a premium experience.
Search All SE Idaho Homes