Belfast — Northern Ireland’s capital and largest city — has undergone remarkable transformation over the past two decades. Once known primarily for its troubled history, Belfast now boasts a thriving cultural scene, award-winning restaurants, a growing tech sector, and some of the lowest living costs of any major UK city. Here’s exactly what living in Belfast costs in 2026.
Belfast Cost of Living Summary
| Category | Monthly Cost (Single) | Monthly Cost (Couple) | Monthly Cost (Family) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (average) | £600-850 | £750-1,020 | £900-1,250 |
| Utilities | £130-178 | £150-205 | £175-240 |
| Rates (NI equivalent of Council Tax) | £85-115 | £85-115 | £85-115 |
| Transport | £48-88 | £96-176 | £115-215 |
| Groceries | £175-248 | £315-400 | £400-535 |
| Internet & Mobile | £40-55 | £50-70 | £60-85 |
| Entertainment | £75-155 | £115-240 | £150-310 |
| TOTAL (excl. rent) | £553-839 | £811-1,206 | £985-1,500 |
| TOTAL (incl. rent) | £1,153-1,689 | £1,561-2,226 | £1,885-2,750 |
Housing Costs in Belfast
Rental Prices by Area (2026)
| Area | 1-Bed Flat | 2-Bed Flat | 3-Bed House | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| City Centre | £800-1,150 | £1,050-1,480 | £1,350-1,900 | Modern, nightlife |
| Titanic Quarter | £850-1,200 | £1,100-1,550 | £1,400-1,950 | Waterfront, new builds |
| South Belfast (Malone) | £750-1,050 | £980-1,380 | £1,250-1,750 | Affluent, leafy |
| Stranmillis | £680-950 | £880-1,240 | £1,120-1,570 | University area |
| Ormeau Road | £600-850 | £780-1,100 | £1,000-1,400 | Trendy, diverse |
| East Belfast (Ballyhackamore) | £580-820 | £750-1,060 | £960-1,340 | Up-and-coming |
| Botanic | £550-780 | £720-1,010 | £920-1,290 | Student friendly |
| North Belfast (Shore Road) | £480-680 | £620-880 | £800-1,120 | Improving |
| West Belfast (Falls) | £450-640 | £590-830 | £750-1,050 | Budget-friendly |
| Lisburn Road area | £650-920 | £850-1,200 | £1,080-1,520 | Shops, restaurants |
Buying Property in Belfast
| Area | Average House Price | Price per sqm | First-Time Buyer Viable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Malone | £300,000-500,000 | £3,500-4,800 | Challenging |
| Stranmillis | £220,000-350,000 | £2,800-3,800 | Upper range |
| Ballyhackamore | £200,000-320,000 | £2,500-3,500 | Accessible |
| Ormeau | £190,000-300,000 | £2,400-3,300 | Accessible |
| City Centre flats | £170,000-280,000 | £2,800-4,200 | Flats accessible |
| Titanic Quarter | £200,000-350,000 | £3,000-4,500 | Upper range |
| North Belfast | £120,000-200,000 | £1,600-2,300 | Very accessible |
| West Belfast | £110,000-180,000 | £1,400-2,100 | Yes, affordable |
| East Belfast (inner) | £140,000-220,000 | £1,800-2,600 | Very accessible |
Northern Ireland property: NI uses Stamp Duty Land Tax like England but has different Help to Buy schemes. Co-Ownership NI helps buyers purchase with lower deposits.
Mortgage affordability: Based on 4.5x salary multiplier, you’d need to earn approximately £34,000 to buy an average Belfast property (£153,000). Belfast is highly accessible for first-time buyers.
Utility Bills
Average Monthly Utility Costs
| Utility | 1-Bed Flat | 2-Bed Property | 3-Bed House |
|---|---|---|---|
| Electricity | £48-68 | £62-88 | £76-108 |
| Gas | £42-62 | £56-80 | £70-98 |
| Water | Free* | Free* | Free* |
| Rates (domestic) | £85-115 | £90-125 | £100-140 |
| TOTAL | £175-245 | £208-293 | £246-346 |
*Northern Ireland does not charge separately for water — it’s included in your rates.
Rates system: Northern Ireland has a domestic rates system instead of Council Tax. Rates are based on property value and include both regional and district rates. They’re generally lower than English Council Tax.
Transport Costs
Public Transport
| Pass Type | Monthly Cost | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Metro (Translink) | £58/month | Belfast city buses |
| Glider | £62/month | Rapid transit East-West |
| NI Railways (Belfast zones) | £75-95/month | Suburban rail |
| Enterprise to Dublin | £30-60 return | Cross-border train |
| Flights to London | £40-120 return | 1hr 15min |
Belfast is compact and walkable. The Glider (rapid bus transit) has improved cross-city travel significantly.
Car Ownership Costs
| Expense | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| Car insurance (average) | £52-105 |
| Fuel (10,000 miles/year) | £90-135 |
| Parking (city centre monthly) | £90-150 |
| Road tax (average) | £15-30 |
| MOT (vehicle test) | £30/year = £2.50/month |
| TOTAL | £250-423 |
Tip: Car ownership is more common in Belfast than mainland UK cities due to limited public transport outside the city. However, the compact centre is very walkable.
Food and Groceries
Supermarket Comparison
| Supermarket | Monthly Spend (Single) | Presence |
|---|---|---|
| Lidl | £145-185 | Strong presence |
| Asda | £165-215 | Multiple stores |
| Tesco | £180-238 | Widespread |
| Sainsbury’s | £188-248 | Several stores |
| Centra/Spar (local) | £200-270 | Everywhere |
| M&S Food | £260-350 | City centre |
Dining Out
| Type | Average Cost |
|---|---|
| Casual lunch | £5-8 |
| Restaurant meal (mid-range) | £12-20 |
| Three-course dinner | £28-45 |
| Pint of beer (pub) | £4.50-5.80 |
| Coffee (café) | £2.80-3.60 |
| Ulster fry | £6-10 |
Belfast’s food scene has exploded in recent years with award-winning restaurants. St George’s Market is excellent for local produce at competitive prices.
Entertainment and Lifestyle
Monthly Entertainment Budget
| Activity | Cost |
|---|---|
| Gym membership | £20-48 |
| Cinema ticket | £9-12 |
| Theatre (Grand Opera House) | £18-55 |
| Monthly streaming | £15-25 |
| Night out (Cathedral Quarter) | £28-55 |
Free and Low-Cost Activities
Belfast offers excellent free attractions:
- Titanic Belfast — World’s leading tourist attraction (paid but excellent)
- Ulster Museum — Free, excellent collections
- Botanic Gardens — Beautiful Victorian gardens, free
- Cathedral Quarter walks — Street art and architecture
- Cave Hill Country Park — Stunning views over Belfast
- St George’s Market — Victorian market, weekends
- Peace Walls and murals — Self-guided tours free
- Belfast City Hall — Free tours available
Belfast vs Other UK Cities
| City | Monthly Cost (Single) | vs Belfast |
|---|---|---|
| London | £2,800-3,500 | +125% more expensive |
| Edinburgh | £1,900-2,400 | +40% more expensive |
| Manchester | £1,700-2,200 | +25% more expensive |
| Glasgow | £1,500-2,000 | +15% more expensive |
| Liverpool | £1,500-1,900 | +12% more expensive |
| Belfast | £1,400-1,800 | Baseline |
| Sheffield | £1,400-1,800 | Similar |
| Hull | £1,200-1,550 | -10% cheaper |
See our complete UK cost of living by city comparison.
Salary Requirements for Belfast
What Salary Do You Need?
| Lifestyle | Single | Couple | Family (2 kids) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Survival (basic, houseshare) | £17,000 | £27,000 | £32,000 |
| Comfortable (own flat, savings) | £25,000 | £40,000 | £48,000 |
| Good lifestyle (nice area, dining) | £34,000 | £54,000 | £66,000 |
| Affluent (Malone/Stranmillis) | £45,000+ | £72,000+ | £88,000+ |
Average Salaries in Belfast by Sector
| Industry | Average Salary |
|---|---|
| Tech/Fintech (Citi, Allstate etc.) | £35,000-55,000 |
| Financial Services | £32,000-52,000 |
| Legal | £28,000-55,000 |
| Healthcare (NHS/HSC) | £27,000-48,000 |
| Professional Services | £28,000-48,000 |
| Public Sector (NI Civil Service) | £26,000-45,000 |
| Creative/Media | £24,000-40,000 |
| Hospitality (major sector) | £20,000-28,000 |
Belfast has attracted significant tech investment — Citi, Allstate, PwC, and many others have major operations here. The public sector is also a major employer.
Use our take-home pay calculator to see your actual earnings.
Northern Ireland-Specific Considerations
Differences from GB
| Feature | Northern Ireland | England/Wales/Scotland |
|---|---|---|
| Water charges | Free (in rates) | Separate bill |
| Property tax | Rates system | Council Tax |
| Healthcare | HSC (not NHS) | NHS |
| University fees (NI students) | Lower caps | Up to £9,250/year |
| Car insurance | Often higher | Varies |
| Currency | Sterling | Sterling |
| Border with Republic | Open (CTA) | N/A |
Cross-Border Considerations
Belfast is only 100 miles from Dublin. Many people:
- Shop across the border for certain goods
- Travel to Dublin Airport for more flight options
- Work remotely for Dublin companies (often better pay)
- Access Republic of Ireland healthcare (EHIC)
Best Areas to Live on a Budget
Top Affordable Neighbourhoods
- Botanic — Student friendly, central, vibrant, £550-780/month one-bed
- Ormeau Road — Trendy, diverse, great food, £600-850/month one-bed
- East Belfast (inner) — Improving rapidly, good transport, £540-760/month one-bed
- Ballysillan/Ardoyne — North Belfast value, £450-640/month one-bed
- Andersonstown — West Belfast, improving amenities, £440-620/month one-bed
Worth the Premium
- South Belfast — Tree-lined streets, near Botanic Gardens, excellent restaurants
- Cathedral Quarter — Heart of culture and nightlife, walkable to everything
- Titanic Quarter — Modern waterfront living, growing amenities
Moving to Belfast: Budget Checklist
One-Off Moving Costs
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Deposit (typically 1 month rent) | £600-1,000 |
| First month’s rent | £500-900 |
| Agency/admin fees | £0-150 |
| Moving costs (varies by origin) | £100-500+ |
| Utility connection fees | £0-50 |
| TOTAL | £1,200-2,600 |
First Month Budget
Plan for approximately £1,800-3,000 for your first month including deposit, rent, and essential setup costs.
Belfast-Specific Money Tips
- No water charges — Significant saving versus GB
- Rates usually cheaper — Than equivalent Council Tax in England
- Free museums — Ulster Museum and several others are free
- St George’s Market — Fresh produce Friday-Sunday at great prices
- Cross-border shopping — ROI can offer savings on certain goods
- Tech salaries — Belfast tech sector often pays London-lite salaries
- Co-Ownership NI — Helps first-time buyers with shared ownership
- GB medical card — If registered with GP, prescriptions free in NI too
Summary: Is Belfast Affordable?
Belfast offers exceptional value — a capital city with genuine cultural attractions, a thriving food scene, growing tech sector, and living costs among the lowest in the UK. The transformation since the Good Friday Agreement has been remarkable.
Best for: Young professionals seeking value, tech workers, anyone wanting city amenities at affordable prices, those interested in Irish culture in a UK setting.
Consider carefully: Public transport is limited outside the city. Weather is notably rainy. Some areas retain legacy issues from the Troubles. Job market is smaller than GB major cities.
For help planning your finances, use our budget planner guide and emergency fund calculator.