Cost of Living in the UK by City: Compare Rent, Bills and Affordability

Cost of Living in Northern Ireland 2026 — Is It Really Cheaper?

Is Northern Ireland cheaper to live in than England? We compare housing costs, groceries, transport, and bills across NI cities and towns in 2026 with practical budget figures.

Northern Ireland is one of the UK’s most affordable regions — particularly for housing. But the picture isn’t uniform across the province, and some costs (particularly car dependency due to limited public transport) can erode the housing advantage. Here’s a realistic breakdown.

NI vs Rest of UK — The Big Picture

Metric NI 2026 England avg London Scotland
Average house price ~£185,000 ~£305,000 ~£540,000 ~£210,000
Average rent (1-bed) ~£750–£950 ~£1,100 ~£2,000 ~£950
Average domestic rates/council tax ~£1,000–£1,400/year ~£2,100/year ~£1,400/year ~£1,400/year
Average salary ~£30,000 ~£37,000 ~£47,000 ~£36,000

The lower average salary in NI partially offsets the cost advantage — but the affordability ratio (house price to income) is markedly better than most of England.

Housing Costs Across Northern Ireland

Belfast

Rent (per month, 2026):

  • 1-bed flat (city centre): £900–£1,100
  • 1-bed flat (outer areas, e.g. East Belfast, Newtownabbey): £700–£900
  • 2-bed house (South Belfast, Malone): £1,000–£1,300
  • 2-bed house (North Belfast, Antrim Road): £700–£950

House prices:

  • Semi-detached (South Belfast): £200,000–£280,000
  • Terrace (East Belfast): £150,000–£200,000
  • New build apartment (city centre): £180,000–£250,000

Commuter Towns

Town Distance to Belfast Avg house price Avg rent (1-bed)
Lisburn 8 miles (rail) £175,000–£230,000 £650–£800
Carrickfergus 12 miles (rail) £145,000–£195,000 £600–£750
Bangor 15 miles (rail) £155,000–£210,000 £620–£780
Antrim 18 miles £140,000–£185,000 £580–£720
Newtownards 11 miles £150,000–£200,000 £580–£730

Other NI Cities and Towns

Location Profile Avg house price Rent (1-bed)
Derry/Londonderry NI’s second city £130,000–£185,000 £600–£800
Newry Cross-border town £165,000–£225,000 £650–£850
Armagh Historic city £135,000–£175,000 £550–£700
Enniskillen Fermanagh lakelands £130,000–£175,000 £520–£680
Omagh Rural west NI £120,000–£165,000 £500–£650

Monthly Budget Estimates (2026)

Single person, renting 1-bed, Belfast:

Cost Monthly
Rent £850
Domestic rates (if separately charged) £90–£110
Energy (gas + electric) £100–£150
Food and groceries £200–£270
Car (insurance, fuel, tax) £200–£350
Or: Public transport (Metro Belfast) £60–£100
Broadband and phone £50–£70
Total estimate £1,550–£2,000/month

Couple, buying with mortgage (£185,000, 10% deposit):

Cost Monthly
Mortgage (25yr, 4.5%) ~£950
Domestic rates (typically included for owner-occupiers) £100–£130
Energy £130–£180
Food £350–£450
Two cars or mixed transport £400–£600
Total estimate £1,930–£2,360/month

The Car Dependency Factor

The main hidden cost in NI living: public transport is significantly less developed than in Great Britain’s major cities. Outside Belfast (which has the Metro bus network and some rail links), most of Northern Ireland requires a car for everyday life.

Typical annual car costs in NI 2026:

  • Insurance: £600–£1,200 (Belfast city can be higher; rural lower)
  • Fuel: £1,200–£2,000 depending on mileage
  • Road tax: £180–£600 depending on vehicle
  • Servicing and MOT: £300–£600
  • Total: £2,280–£4,400/year

This is a significant offset to lower housing costs, particularly for households running two cars (common outside Belfast).

What NI Doesn’t Have Compared to Wales

  • Prescription charges: NI charges £9.90/item (same as England); Wales has free prescriptions
  • No extra council tax band (Band I): NI doesn’t have council tax at all — domestic rates tend to be lower than equivalent English/Welsh council tax for mid-range properties
  • Hospital parking: Not universally free (unlike Wales)

Sources

  1. ONS — UK House Price Index Northern Ireland
  2. NISRA — Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency