Home Living in the USA Cost of Living in the USA 2026 — City-by-City Comparison
Living in the USA Updated April 2026

Cost of Living in the USA 2026 — City-by-City Comparison

Monthly living costs in the USA vary wildly — from $2,400 in Texas to $6,000+ in San Francisco. Here is the honest breakdown by city.

InfoUnitedStates.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Quick Summary

CitySolo budgetCoupleFamily (4)
San Francisco$4,800$7,500$12,000+
New York City$4,500$7,200$11,500+
Boston$4,000$6,500$10,000+
Los Angeles$3,800$6,200$9,500+
Seattle$3,800$6,200$9,500+
Washington DC$3,700$6,000$9,000+
Chicago$3,200$5,200$7,800+
Miami$3,200$5,200$8,000+
Denver$3,000$4,800$7,200+
Austin$2,800$4,600$7,000+
Nashville$2,600$4,200$6,500+
Pittsburgh$2,400$3,800$5,800+

Budgets are for a comfortable middle-class lifestyle — not frugal, not luxurious. Include rent, food, healthcare, transport, utilities and entertainment.

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New York City

Solo monthly: $4,500

The most expensive US city after SF, but dense and walkable so car costs are zero.

  • Rent (1-bed Brooklyn/Queens, outer): $2,400
  • Rent (1-bed Manhattan): $3,800+
  • Groceries: $400-500
  • Eating out (2-3x/week): $350
  • MTA unlimited monthly: $132
  • Health insurance (solo): $550
  • Utilities + Internet: $200
  • Phone: $60
  • Entertainment: $300

Los Angeles

Solo monthly: $3,800

Car costs are the biggest surprise — budget $600+/month for a car in LA.

  • Rent (1-bed West Hollywood/Santa Monica): $2,600
  • Rent (1-bed further out): $1,800
  • Car + insurance + gas: $500-700
  • Groceries: $400
  • Eating out: $350
  • Health insurance: $550
  • Utilities + Internet: $180
  • Phone: $55

San Francisco

Solo monthly: $4,800

The priciest US city. Rent is the killer.

  • Rent (1-bed SoMa/Mission): $3,400
  • Rent (1-bed Oakland — commute): $2,400
  • Groceries: $450
  • Eating out: $400
  • BART/Muni monthly: $98
  • Health insurance: $550
  • Utilities + Internet: $180
  • Entertainment: $300

Chicago

Solo monthly: $3,200

The best big-city value in America. Rents are half of NYC/SF for a comparable lifestyle.

  • Rent (1-bed Wicker Park/Logan Square): $1,600
  • Rent (1-bed downtown): $2,400
  • Groceries: $350
  • Eating out: $280
  • CTA monthly pass: $75
  • Health insurance: $500
  • Utilities + Internet: $180

Miami

Solo monthly: $3,200

Rent has exploded 2021-2025 but no state income tax helps.

  • Rent (1-bed Brickell/Wynwood): $2,200
  • Rent (1-bed further out): $1,500
  • Car essential: $500
  • Groceries: $400
  • Eating out: $300
  • Health insurance: $500
  • Utilities (with AC): $220

Austin

Solo monthly: $2,800

Best balance of big-city amenities and lower cost. Tech jobs plentiful.

  • Rent (1-bed central): $1,800
  • Car: $450
  • Groceries: $350
  • Eating out: $250
  • Health insurance: $500
  • Utilities + Internet: $170

Denver

Solo monthly: $3,000

Excellent quality of life for the price. Outdoor access unmatched.

  • Rent (1-bed LoHi/RiNo): $1,800
  • Car + higher gas/insurance for mountain driving: $500
  • Groceries: $380
  • Eating out: $270
  • Health insurance: $520

Seattle

Solo monthly: $3,800

Tech salaries offset the high cost. No state income tax.

  • Rent (1-bed Capitol Hill/Belltown): $2,400
  • Groceries: $420
  • Eating out: $350
  • Orca transit card: $100
  • Health insurance: $540

Boston

Solo monthly: $4,000

Expensive like NYC but compact and walkable.

  • Rent (1-bed Back Bay/Cambridge): $2,800
  • Groceries: $420
  • Eating out: $340
  • MBTA monthly: $90
  • Health insurance: $540

Cheaper Cities

If you are flexible on location, these cities offer much more for less:

  • Pittsburgh, PA: $2,400/mo — beautiful, historic, strong universities
  • Cleveland, OH: $2,300/mo — excellent food scene, affordable
  • Kansas City, MO: $2,400/mo — BBQ capital, Midwest value
  • Indianapolis, IN: $2,400/mo — growing tech scene
  • Oklahoma City, OK: $2,200/mo — cheapest big city on this list
  • Raleigh-Durham, NC: $2,700/mo — research triangle, growing fast

Categories Explained

Healthcare is the hidden cost that surprises foreigners. Unless your employer provides insurance, you'll pay $400-700/month on a Marketplace plan. Not having insurance is risky — a single ER visit can be $10,000+.

Car ownership is $500-700/month in most cities (payment + insurance + gas + parking). NYC, SF, Boston, Chicago, DC and Philadelphia don't require a car.

State income tax varies from 0% (Texas, Florida, Tennessee, Washington, Nevada) to 13% (California). This makes a huge difference in take-home pay.

Rent is 40-60% of most budgets in expensive cities. Rent is usually negotiable and landlord-friendly laws vary — research your state.

💳 Money tip: Open a Wise account for international transfers. Real exchange rate, low fees, works with US bank accounts. See our banking guide.
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest US city for expats?

Among major cities with job markets: Austin, Nashville, Raleigh, Kansas City, Pittsburgh. Monthly budgets $2,400-3,500 for a solo expat.

Is $100,000 a good salary in the USA?

Depends on the city. Excellent in Austin, Nashville or Dallas. Middle-class in Chicago or Seattle. Barely enough in NYC or SF.

How much does health insurance cost monthly in the USA?

$400-700/month for a single adult on a Marketplace plan. Employer-sponsored plans cost much less ($100-200/month to the employee).