Assembling your view…
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Crunching costs, sorting signals, rendering insights.
Newcastle upon Tyne digital nomad score: 68/100 — internet 62 Mbps, walk score 74/100, safety 56/100, rent £800/mo, nightlife 82/100. Full breakdown vs North East peers.
Newcastle upon Tyne digital nomad score: 68/100 — internet 62 Mbps, walk score 74/100, safety 56/100, rent £800/mo, nightlife 82/100. Full breakdown vs North East peers.
Newcastle upon Tyne: cost index 89 (-14 vs national avg 103), rent £800/month.
North East region average cost index: 103. Newcastle upon Tyne is -14 vs region peers.
Quality of life: 63/100 — safety 56, healthcare 72, walkability 74.
Safety score: 56/100 (crime rate 88.9/1k). National average: 61/100.
Think you know which city wins? The data might disagree. Newcastle upon Tyne has a cost index of 89 — 14 points below the United Kingdom national average of 103. Median income is £30,500 with rent at £800/month, putting the rent-to-income ratio at 31%. This combination is rare — and valuable.
Digging deeper, looking at North East as a whole, the spread across all 27 cities is 6 points on the cost index. Sunderland sits at the other end with index 83 and rent of £660/mo. That's not a marginal difference — it reshapes your monthly budget.
On quality of life, Newcastle upon Tyne scores a composite score of 63/100 — reflecting its safety (56), healthcare (72), and walkability (74) metrics. Pair that with the housing data, and the pattern sharpens. affordability and QoL don't always move in the same direction, and United Kingdom is a good example of that tension.
For digital nomads specifically, Newcastle upon Tyne earns a DN score of 68/100, powered by 62 Mbps internet, walkability of 74/100, and a nightlife score of 82/100. Over a five-year window, that difference is life-changing.
| # | City | Cost Index | Rent/mo | Income | DN Score | Internet (Mbps) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Newcastle upon Tyne | 89 | £800 | £30,500 | 68 | 62 |
| 2 | Edinburgh | 110 | £1,220 | £37,000 | 70 | 68 |
| 3 | Cambridge | 129 | £1,450 | £41,000 | 69 | 85 |
| 4 | Manchester | 103 | £1,080 | £33,800 | 68 | 70 |
| 5 | Glasgow | 95 | £960 | £32,600 | 68 | 65 |
| 6 | Liverpool | 92 | £830 | £30,500 | 67 | 62 |
| 7 | Leeds | 96 | £950 | £31,600 | 67 | 65 |
| 8 | Bristol | 112 | £1,200 | £35,800 | 66 | 70 |
| 9 | Oxford | 132 | £1,500 | £39,000 | 65 | 75 |
| 10 | Birmingham | 97 | £950 | £32,200 | 65 | 65 |
| 11 | Nottingham | 94 | £880 | £31,000 | 65 | 62 |
| 12 | Sheffield | 91 | £830 | £30,000 | 65 | 60 |
| 13 | York | 107 | £1,080 | £34,700 | 65 | 58 |
| 14 | Cardiff | 96 | £940 | £32,600 | 65 | 58 |
| 15 | Belfast | 89 | £780 | £30,500 | 65 | 55 |
| 16 | Brighton | 122 | £1,350 | £37,000 | 64 | 68 |
| 17 | Aberdeen | 98 | £810 | £35,800 | 64 | 60 |
| 18 | Reading | 124 | £1,300 | £40,000 | 63 | 78 |
| 19 | London | 142 | £2,000 | £42,500 | 62 | 72 |
| 20 | Leicester | 93 | £860 | £30,000 | 62 | 58 |
Newcastle upon Tyne — cost index 89, rent £800/mo, income £30,500, QoL 63/100.
Edinburgh — cost index 110, rent £1,220/mo, income £37,000, QoL 65/100.
Cambridge — cost index 129, rent £1,450/mo, income £41,000, QoL 61/100.
Manchester — cost index 103, rent £1,080/mo, income £33,800, QoL 56/100.
Glasgow — cost index 95, rent £960/mo, income £32,600, QoL 60/100.
Newcastle upon Tyne earns a digital nomad score of 68/100 — internet 62 Mbps, walk score 74/100, safety 56/100, rent £800/month.
The North East region of average QoL score is 60/100. Newcastle upon Tyne leads with 63/100, reflecting safety, healthcare access, walkability, and green space.
Our index is benchmarked to 100 (national median). Sub-categories cover housing, food, transport, utilities, and healthcare. Data sources include ONS, Land Registry, HMRC.
Newcastle upon Tyne: cost index 89, rent £800/mo, income £30,500/yr, QoL 63/100. Edinburgh: cost index 110, rent £1,220/mo, income £37,000/yr, QoL 65/100.
This analysis uses data from ONS, Land Registry, HMRC to rank cities in United Kingdom. The cost of living index is benchmarked to 100 (national median). Quality of life scores combine safety, healthcare, walkability, air quality, green space, and transit metrics. Salary ranges use national occupation data adjusted for local cost differences. Data is updated regularly to reflect current market conditions.