Assembling your view…
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Austin: high income, low cost — a rare combo. Austin earns above the national median ($91,461 vs $80,367) while keeping costs below average (index 89 vs 111). That combination is exceptionally rare — only 40 of 288 cities share it.
Austin earns above the national median ($91,461 vs $80,367) while keeping costs below average (index 89 vs 111). That combination is exceptionally rare — only 40 of 288 cities share it.
Rent in #1-ranked Austin has decreased from $1,578 to $1,531/mo over the past 12 months — a 3% decrease. The downward trend makes it an even stronger pick.
Austin: high income, low cost — a rare combo. Austin earns above the national median ($91,461 vs $80,367) while keeping costs below average (index 89 vs 111). That combination is exceptionally rare — only 40 of 288 cities share it.
In plain English: Austin breaks the usual trade-off between income and cost of living. Most affordable cities pay less — but Austin delivers a median household income of $91,461 (14% above the national median) while keeping costs 22 points below national average. That's a rare combination shared by only 40 of the 288 cities we track.
Why Austin ranks #1: the numbers tell a clear story. At 89 on the cost index, residents save roughly 22% less than the typical American. Rent sits at $1,531/month while the median household pulls in $91,461/year. The Housing category is particularly strong at 89, though Healthcare (98) lags behind. Home prices average $500,627 — $33,257 above the national median (and that gap widens if you factor in state taxes).
(Tangentially — this is the kind of city where you can actually build equity on a median salary, which is increasingly rare. And in most cases, ) (that's pre-tax, of course).
Now, the part that complicates the narrative: The national baseline: 111 cost index, $1,895/month rent, $80,367 household income. That's the yardstick. The cities ranked here blow past it — starting with Austin at just 89 on the index.
If you're ready to act on this, three things to do next: 1) Click into the city pages for the top 3 and check rent trends — direction matters more than the snapshot. 2) Run your income through the salary calculator for a personalized cost comparison. 3) Compare your top two picks head-to-head on our comparison page. The data is here; the decision is yours (which, to be fair, is a metric that favors smaller cities).
#1 Ranked: Austin, TX — cost index 89, rent $1,531/mo, income $91,461
Austin: high income, low cost — a rare combo
1 of 2 cities come in below the national cost-of-living average of 111
Data sourced from Census Bureau, Zillow, BLS, and Tax Foundation — current as of 2026
979,882 residents · Texas
A closer look at Austin: the cost index of 89 breaks down to a Housing index of 89 (strongest category) and a Healthcare index of 98 (weakest). Median rent is $1,531/month — 19% below the national median — while household income sits at $91,461, meaning locals spend about 20% of income on rent. That's a healthy margin by any standard (we double-checked this one). That's not nothing.
455,924 residents · Florida
Why Miami ranks #2: the numbers tell a clear story. At 173 on the cost index, residents spend roughly 62% more than the typical American. Rent sits at $2,964/month — and yes, that's adjusted for the region — while the median household pulls in $59,390/year. The Healthcare category is particularly strong at 115, though Housing (173) lags behind. Home prices average $573,963 — $106,593 above the national median.
Our cost of living index uses real Zillow rent data as the foundation, indexed to 100 (national median). Sub-categories (housing, food, transport, utilities, healthcare) are derived from the overall index with regional adjustments. Data is updated monthly.
Austin (ranked #1) has a cost index of 89 and rent of $1,531/mo, while Miami (ranked #2) has a cost index of 173 and rent of $2,964/mo — a 84-point difference in cost of living.
City data is refreshed monthly from Census Bureau population estimates, Zillow rent and home price indices, BLS salary data, and Tax Foundation tax rates. Last updated: 2026.
The median 1-bedroom rent in Austin is $1,531/month as of 2026, based on Zillow's Observed Rent Index. This is $364 below the national median of $1,895/month.
The median home price in Austin is $500,627, which is 5.5× the local median income. Most median-income households would stretch to buy at this ratio. The national median home price is $467,370.
This ranking was generated using data current as of early 2026. Population and income data comes from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey (5-year estimates). Rent and home price data is from Zillow's monthly releases. Tax rates are from the Tax Foundation's 2025 edition. Rankings are refreshed monthly.