Stirling occupies a unique position in Scotland — sitting at the historic crossroads of the Highlands and Lowlands, with excellent rail links to both Edinburgh and Glasgow. It is significantly cheaper than either city while offering a high quality of life, a thriving university, and outstanding scenery.
For comparisons see our Cost of Living in Edinburgh guide, Cost of Living in Glasgow guide, and our Cost of Living by City hub.
Stirling Cost of Living Summary 2026
| Category | Single (monthly) | Couple (monthly) | Family (monthly) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (average) | £650–£880 | £850–£1,100 | £980–£1,300 |
| Utilities | £125–£175 | £150–£205 | £180–£250 |
| Council Tax (Band D) | ~£195 | ~£195 | ~£195 |
| Transport | £60–£250 | £120–£350 | £140–£380 |
| Groceries | £175–£255 | £310–£410 | £400–£540 |
| Internet and mobile | £40–£60 | £50–£70 | £60–£88 |
| Entertainment | £70–£140 | £120–£240 | £150–£310 |
| Total (excl. rent) | £665–£1,075 | £1,045–£1,470 | £1,130–£1,763 |
| Total (incl. rent) | £1,315–£1,955 | £1,895–£2,570 | £2,110–£3,063 |
Housing Costs in Stirling
Rental Prices by Area (2026)
| Area | 1-bed flat | 2-bed flat | 3-bed house | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| City Centre / Riverside | £750–£1,000 | £950–£1,280 | £1,180–£1,600 | Historic, central |
| Bridge of Allan | £780–£1,050 | £1,000–£1,350 | £1,250–£1,700 | Affluent village suburb |
| Dunblane (nearby) | £750–£1,020 | £970–£1,300 | £1,200–£1,650 | Desirable commuter town |
| St Ninians | £620–£850 | £800–£1,080 | £990–£1,330 | Residential, family |
| Bannockburn | £580–£800 | £750–£1,010 | £930–£1,250 | Suburban, affordable |
| Raploch / Cornton | £520–£720 | £670–£910 | £830–£1,100 | Most affordable |
Buying in Stirling
| Area | Average house price | First-time buyer viable? |
|---|---|---|
| Bridge of Allan / Dunblane | £250,000–£420,000 | With large deposit |
| City Centre | £160,000–£280,000 | Achievable |
| St Ninians / Bannockburn | £145,000–£240,000 | Accessible |
| Raploch / Cornton | £100,000–£165,000 | Very accessible |
Commuting to Edinburgh and Glasgow
One of Stirling’s biggest advantages is its commuter position:
| Route | Train journey | Monthly season ticket (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Stirling → Edinburgh | 42–55 mins | £200–£250 |
| Stirling → Glasgow Queen St | 33–45 mins | £160–£200 |
| Stirling → Perth | 20–30 mins | £80–£110 |
Many Edinburgh and Glasgow workers choose to live in Stirling to benefit from significantly lower rents — the savings typically outweigh the season ticket cost by a considerable margin.
What Salary Do You Need?
| Lifestyle | Annual salary (single, working locally) |
|---|---|
| Minimum (shared house) | £20,000–£23,000 |
| Comfortable (own 1-bed) | £23,000–£27,000 |
| Good quality of life (savings, socialising) | £27,000–£33,000 |
| Commuting to Edinburgh, own flat | £28,000–£35,000 (to cover season ticket) |
Stirling vs Nearby Cities
| City | 1-bed rent (city centre) | Commute to Glasgow | Commute to Edinburgh |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stirling | £750–£1,000 | 35–45 min train | 42–55 min train |
| Glasgow | £750–£1,000 | — | 50–60 min train |
| Edinburgh | £1,100–£1,500 | 50–60 min train | — |
| Perth | £650–£900 | 60 min | 60 min |
Stirling’s rent is similar to Glasgow but with Edinburgh-level access via fast rail links — making it a smart choice for commuters priced out of Edinburgh.
Economy and Employment in Stirling
Understanding the local employment market helps assess whether a salary offer in Stirling makes sense in context.
| Stirling employment profile | |
|---|---|
| Key sectors | Education, Public Sector, Tourism |
| Key employers | University of Stirling, NHS Scotland, Scottish Government, tourism |
| Graduate opportunities | Available in tech, public sector and education |
| Remote working impact | Growing number of professionals commuting to larger centres or working fully remote |
Stirling is primarily a education, public sector, tourism economy. This profile shapes salary expectations — roles in the dominant sectors typically pay well relative to local rents, while consumer-facing roles (hospitality, retail) align closely to the National Living Wage.
For those relocating to Stirling for work, the relatively lower cost of living compared to London and the South East means that a salary of £28,000–£38,000 can provide a comfortable lifestyle — equivalent to £45,000–£55,000 in greater London in purchasing power terms.
See our average UK salary guide and our is £30,000 a good salary guide for more on living costs relative to income.