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Cost of Living Breakdown by City — Rent, Food & Transport

See exactly where your money goes — rent, food, transport, utilities. Real Numbeo data for 65+ cities.

🇲🇽

Tulum

Mexico

$1525

estimated /month

🏠 Rent

$1045

69%

🍽️ Food & Dining

$255

17%

🚌 Transport

$30

2%

💡 Utilities & Internet

$129

8%

🎉 Fun & Fitness

$66

4%

Full city profile →

Assumptions: 1-bed city centre apartment, 20 restaurant meals + 15 coffees, 40 transit trips, basic utilities + internet, 12 beers + gym membership per month. Actual costs vary by lifestyle. Data from Numbeo.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to live in Europe per month?

Monthly costs range from ~$1,200 in Bucharest or Athens to $3,500+ in Zurich or London. A single person in Central Europe (Prague, Warsaw, Budapest) typically needs $1,400–$2,000/month for rent, food, transport, and utilities.

What is the cheapest city in Europe to live in?

Among cities in our database, Bucharest (Romania, ~$620/mo rent), Athens (Greece, ~$740/mo), and Tallinn (Estonia, ~$815/mo) are among the cheapest in Europe. For Southeast Asia, Chiang Mai ($300/mo) and Bali ($350/mo) are even lower.

How is the cost of living breakdown calculated?

We use Numbeo data: rent (1-bed city centre), food (20 restaurant meals + 15 coffees), 40 transit trips, and basic utilities. It's a realistic single-person budget, not a backpacker minimum.

Is rent the biggest expense when relocating?

In most cities, rent is 40–60% of monthly costs. In expensive cities like Zurich or Amsterdam it can hit 70%. In affordable cities like Bucharest or Chiang Mai it drops to ~35–45%, leaving more headroom for everything else.

How does cost of living compare between Western and Eastern Europe?

Eastern European cities (Budapest, Warsaw, Prague, Krakow, Belgrade) typically cost 40–60% less than Western European equivalents. A $2,500/month lifestyle in Berlin becomes $1,200–1,600/month in Central or Eastern Europe — with comparable internet, safety, and urban amenities.