The cost of living in the UK is no longer a single national story. Rent, council tax, transport, childcare, groceries and energy costs vary sharply between cities, and even within the same region the gap between headline salary and real disposable income can be substantial. That is why a city-by-city view matters more than a national average when you are deciding where to live, whether to move for work, or how much income your household really needs.
This hub pulls together our cost-of-living coverage so you can compare places on a practical basis. Use it to understand which cities are cheapest, where salary premiums are real, which costs hit households hardest in 2026, and what steps make the biggest difference when prices are rising faster than incomes.
UK cost-of-living overview for 2026
For most households, the biggest monthly expenses are still housing, energy, food and transport. If you rent privately, housing is usually the dominant cost. If you own a home, mortgage rates, insurance and council tax can still create the same pressure. Families with children then face an additional layer of childcare and school-related costs that can outweigh modest salary increases.
Several broad patterns shape affordability across the UK:
- London remains the most expensive market for rent and commuting.
- Major regional cities are generally cheaper than London, but rent inflation has narrowed the gap in some locations.
- Households in lower-cost areas may still feel squeezed if local wages lag behind national averages.
- Bills have stabilised in some categories compared with the peak of the cost-of-living crisis, but they remain high relative to pre-crisis norms.
If you want the broader starting point, read Cost of Living Guide, Cost of Living by City and Cost of Living Alone.
City comparison table
The table below is a broad comparison guide for typical city living costs. Figures are indicative and intended for relative comparison rather than exact household budgeting.
| City | Typical monthly rent | Council tax and core bills | Average salary context | Affordability score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| London | GBP1,900+ | GBP350 to GBP450 | Highest pay, highest costs | 4/10 |
| Edinburgh | GBP1,250 | GBP300 to GBP380 | Strong professional salaries | 6/10 |
| Bristol | GBP1,300 | GBP300 to GBP380 | Good salaries, tight rental market | 5/10 |
| Brighton | GBP1,350 | GBP320 to GBP390 | Coastal premium, commuter demand | 5/10 |
| Manchester | GBP1,100 | GBP280 to GBP350 | Strong wages relative to many cities | 7/10 |
| Birmingham | GBP1,000 | GBP280 to GBP350 | Broad employment base | 7/10 |
| Leeds | GBP1,000 | GBP270 to GBP340 | Competitive for affordability | 7/10 |
| Glasgow | GBP950 | GBP260 to GBP330 | Lower rents than many southern cities | 7/10 |
| Liverpool | GBP900 | GBP260 to GBP330 | Lower housing costs support affordability | 8/10 |
| Cardiff | GBP950 | GBP260 to GBP330 | Moderate costs and broad services | 7/10 |
| Belfast | GBP900 | GBP250 to GBP320 | Often cheaper housing than GB cities | 8/10 |
| Newcastle | GBP875 | GBP250 to GBP320 | Lower rents improve disposable income | 8/10 |
| Nottingham | GBP925 | GBP260 to GBP330 | Mid-range costs, varied local pay | 7/10 |
| Sheffield | GBP900 | GBP250 to GBP320 | Strong value for many renters | 8/10 |
The affordability score is a simple guide that weighs housing pressure against typical salary levels. It does not replace a personal budget, but it is useful for comparing cities quickly.
Where costs differ most
Housing
Housing is the cost category that creates the biggest regional divide. London is in a separate bracket, but Bristol, Brighton and Edinburgh also have expensive rental markets relative to local earnings. By contrast, cities such as Liverpool, Sheffield and Newcastle often look stronger on affordability because rent consumes a smaller share of take-home pay.
Useful housing reads:
- Average Rent by City
- How Much Rent Can I Afford?
- Is GBP500 a Month Good for Rent?
- Struggling to Pay Rent
- Cheapest Places to Live in the UK
Household bills
Bills matter because they rise across the board, not just in expensive cities. Council tax, broadband, water, energy and insurance can make a moderate-rent area feel much less affordable than it first appears. The practical question is not just what your rent is, but what your total household running cost looks like each month.
Start here:
Food and everyday spending
Groceries and day-to-day spending vary less by region than housing, but the differences still add up. Family size, dietary needs and how often you rely on convenience food or takeaway spending often matter more than postcode. That means some of the best savings come from shopping habits rather than moving house.
Related guides:
Energy and transport
Energy costs hit almost every household, while transport costs depend heavily on whether you commute by rail, bus or car. High city salaries can be undermined by season tickets, parking, congestion costs or long-distance commuting. In lower-cost cities, transport may be cheaper but car dependence can still keep overall spending high.
Useful guides:
Cost of living by city
These city guides are the core of the cluster and are the best place to start if you are comparing a move, a job offer or a new renting decision:
- Cost of Living in Belfast
- Cost of Living in Birmingham
- Cost of Living in Brighton
- Cost of Living in Bristol
- Cost of Living in Cardiff
- Cost of Living in Edinburgh
- Cost of Living in Glasgow
- Cost of Living in Leeds
- Cost of Living in Liverpool
- Cost of Living in Manchester
- Cost of Living in Newcastle
- Cost of Living in Nottingham
- Cost of Living in Sheffield
- London vs Manchester Cost of Living
How to manage rising costs without cutting blindly
The best response to high living costs is usually a mix of structural and short-term changes. Structural changes are the big ones: housing, commuting pattern, childcare setup, debt costs and income. Short-term savings matter too, but they rarely solve the problem on their own.
In practice, households usually get the biggest wins from:
- reducing rent or renegotiating housing choices
- switching fixed bills regularly
- claiming any council tax reductions or energy support they qualify for
- avoiding lifestyle inflation after a pay rise
- matching spending plans to real take-home pay rather than gross salary
Useful tools and guides:
- Inflation Calculator
- Splitting Bills with a Partner
- Money Management for Couples on Different Incomes
- Money Guide for Single Parents
- Financial Checklist for New Parents
Cost of living and salary need to be read together
Affordability is never just about low prices. A city can be cheap but still feel difficult if local salaries are weak or jobs are unstable. Equally, a high-paying city can be poor value if rent swallows the difference. The right comparison is usually salary after tax, minus housing and essential bills, not salary on its own.
That is why this hub pairs well with our income content, especially when you are comparing job offers or thinking about relocation. Start with Salary by Profession, Average Salary in London, Average Salary in Manchester and Best-Paying Cities in the UK.
FAQ
What is the cheapest place to live in the UK?
There is no single answer, but cities and towns in the North, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland often offer lower rent than London and the South East. The cheapest option for you depends on local wages, transport needs and whether you rent or own.
What are average household bills in the UK?
That depends on property size, heating type, council tax band and household size. The most useful way to budget is to total rent or mortgage, council tax, energy, water, broadband, insurance and groceries rather than focusing on one bill in isolation.
Is London worth it for the higher salary?
Sometimes, especially in sectors with a real pay premium and faster progression. But for many households the higher rent and commuting costs reduce the benefit sharply. You need to compare likely take-home pay against full living costs.
Has the cost-of-living crisis ended?
The peak pressure in some categories has eased, but many households still face elevated rents, food costs and energy bills compared with a few years ago. In practical terms, affordability remains a live issue even if inflation has slowed.
Which costs matter most when comparing cities?
Housing usually matters most, followed by energy, council tax, transport and childcare. Salary differences only help if they outpace those core costs.