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)