Sunderland is a coastal city in the North East of England, situated at the mouth of the River Wear. It was historically a centre of shipbuilding and coal mining. Today it has a university, a significant Nissan manufacturing plant (one of Europe’s largest car factories), and an improving city centre. It remains one of England’s most affordable places to live.
Economy and Employment in Sunderland
Understanding the local employment market helps assess whether a salary offer in Sunderland makes sense in context.
| Sunderland employment profile | |
|---|---|
| Key sectors | Manufacturing And Automotive Sector |
| Key employers | Nissan, Vantec, Gentoo Group |
| Graduate opportunities | Available in healthcare, public sector and local industry |
| Remote working impact | Growing number of professionals commuting to larger centres or working fully remote |
Sunderland is primarily a manufacturing and automotive sector 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 Sunderland 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 Cost of Living in Newcastle guide and our Cost of Living by City hub.
Sunderland Cost of Living Summary 2026
| Category | Single (monthly) | Couple (monthly) | Family (monthly) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (average) | £460–£680 | £610–£840 | £690–£930 |
| Utilities | £108–£158 | £135–£185 | £165–£225 |
| Council Tax (Band D) | ~£200 | ~£200 | ~£200 |
| Transport | £50–£220 | £100–£330 | £130–£380 |
| Groceries | £160–£234 | £278–£374 | £358–£492 |
| Internet and mobile | £38–£58 | £48–£68 | £58–£82 |
| Entertainment | £53–£112 | £91–£190 | £117–£241 |
| Total (excl. rent) | £559–£982 | £827–£1,342 | £943–£1,515 |
| Total (incl. rent) | £1,019–£1,662 | £1,437–£2,182 | £1,633–£2,445 |
Housing Costs in Sunderland
Rental Prices by Area (2026)
| Area | 1-bed flat | 2-bed flat | 3-bed house | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| City Centre | £530–£770 | £680–£920 | £820–£1,100 | Regenerating |
| Roker / Seaburn | £580–£830 | £750–£1,010 | £910–£1,220 | Coastal, popular |
| Fulwell | £520–£760 | £670–£910 | £810–£1,080 | Residential, family |
| Springwell | £470–£680 | £610–£830 | £740–£990 | Suburban |
| Hendon | £380–£560 | £490–£680 | £590–£800 | Affordable, central |
| Pallion | £360–£530 | £460–£650 | £560–£760 | Most affordable |
Buying in Sunderland
| Area | Average house price | First-time buyer viable? |
|---|---|---|
| Roker / Seaburn | £140,000–£260,000 | Accessible |
| Fulwell | £110,000–£200,000 | Very accessible |
| City Centre (flats) | £60,000–£120,000 | Outstanding |
| Hendon / Pallion | £55,000–£100,000 | Exceptional FTB |
Transport
| Route | Journey | Monthly ticket |
|---|---|---|
| Sunderland → Newcastle (Metro) | 25–35 mins | £70–£90/month |
| Sunderland → Durham (train) | 15–20 mins | £45–£65/month |
| Sunderland → Middlesbrough (train) | 50–65 mins | £75–£100/month |
| Local bus pass | — | ~£55 |
The Tyne and Wear Metro connects Sunderland directly to Newcastle, Gateshead, and the coast — making car-free commuting to Newcastle genuinely practical.
What Salary Do You Need?
| Lifestyle | Annual salary (single person) |
|---|---|
| Minimum (own flat) | £15,000–£18,000 |
| Comfortable (own flat, savings) | £17,000–£21,000 |
| Good quality (Newcastle commute, savings) | £21,000–£27,000 |
| Premium (own home, car, holidays) | £30,000+ |
Sunderland vs North East Cities
| City | 1-bed city centre | Metro/train to Newcastle |
|---|---|---|
| Sunderland | £520–£750 | 25–35 min |
| Middlesbrough | £490–£720 | 55–70 min (train) |
| Newcastle | £700–£950 | — |
| Durham | £650–£900 | 12–18 min (train) |
See our Cost of Living in Middlesbrough guide, Cost of Living in Newcastle guide, and average UK salary guide.