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City Report Cards — Grades for Affordability, Safety & More

Every city gets graded. Affordability, safety, weather, internet — the full GPA. No extra credit for vibes.

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Hong Kong

Hong Kong · Academic Year 2026

BGPA 3.1
C
💰Affordability

$2225/mo — wallet weeping

A+
🛡️Safety

0.38/100k — genuinely exceptional

A
🌤️Weather

30°C summer · 14°C winter low · 36% sunshine

C
Internet

Internet data not available

A+
📈Economy

$75k GDP/cap · 2.8% unemployment · 1.7% inflation

C+
🏛️Governance

Democracy index 5.2 — flawed democracy

B
🗣️English

EF score 538 — get by easily

Principal's Comments

Hong Kong is solid. Not the flashiest, not the worst. The dependable middle child of cities. There are worse things.

Full city profile →

Grades based on data from Numbeo, UNODC, EIU, World Bank, EF EPI & Ookla Speedtest.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the city grade calculated?

Each grade (A–F) comes from real data: Affordability from Numbeo rent, Safety from UNODC homicide rates, Internet from Ookla Speedtest, Democracy from EIU, Economy from World Bank/IMF, English from EF EPI. An A means top-tier globally for that metric.

Which city gets straight As?

No city scores an A in every category — there are always trade-offs. Singapore scores A for safety and internet but C or D for affordability. Chiang Mai scores A for affordability but C for democracy. The report card helps you spot which trade-offs matter least to you.

Which is the safest city in the world to live in?

Tokyo, Singapore, Vienna, and Amsterdam earn A grades for safety. Safety grades are based on homicide rates per 100,000 residents (UNODC data) — the most consistent cross-country crime measure.

Which city is most affordable for expats?

Southeast Asian cities (Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur) and Eastern European cities (Tbilisi, Belgrade, Krakow) earn A or B for affordability. Based on city-centre rent from Numbeo — a strong proxy for overall cost of living.

What does a D or F grade mean?

Below global average for that metric — not unlivable. A D in affordability (like Zurich or New York) still means a world-class city, just expensive. Use the full report card to understand which trade-offs you're making.