logo
Here Are the Cheapest Cities To Live in the Most Expensive States

Here Are the Cheapest Cities To Live in the Most Expensive States

Yahoo16 hours ago

Even famously expensive states have relatively inexpensive places to live. It's all about knowing where to look.
Among the 16 most expensive states (annual living costs of more than $80,000 a year), there are cities where living costs come in tens of thousands of dollars below state averages. The $40,000 to $50,000 range is the most common.
Find Out:
Learn More:
In a recent analysis, GOBankingRates has taken those 16 states and identified the least expensive city in terms of living costs for each. The cities were pulled from Zillow's list of the 2,500 largest U.S. cities, based on housing market size, for March 2025. The threshold was increased to 4,000 for Maine, North Dakota and Vermont. Cost-of-living data was sourced from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Sperling's BestPlaces.
Here's a rundown on the least expensive city in each of these expensive states, along with side-by-side costs.
Also see the cost of living in every state.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 16th
Average annual cost of living in state: $81,067
Average annual cost of living in city: $36,876
Cedar City is located about 250 miles southwest of Salt Lake City and 170 miles northeast of Las Vegas. Cedar City comes in below the national average for grocery costs, at about $465 a month.
Check Out:
Also Read:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 15th
Average annual cost of living in state: $86,167
Average annual cost of living in city: $39,046
You'll find Sierra Vista about 20 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border in southeast Arizona. Monthly rent here will cost you about $1,400 on average.
Discover More:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 14th
Average annual cost of living in state: $86,554
Average annual cost of living in city: $34,981
Klamath Falls is a town of about 22,000 residents, located about 15 miles north of the California border on U.S. Route 97. It comes in below national averages for groceries (97.3% of the average), healthcare (99.6%), utilities (94%) and transportation (68.6%).
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 13th
Average annual cost of living in state: $86,631
Average annual cost of living in city: $36,531
Waterville is located along the Kennebec River, about 80 miles northeast of Portland, Maine. Average monthly rent in this college town comes in just shy of $1,300. Average healthcare costs are roughly $5,800 a year, below national averages.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 12th
Average annual cost of living in state: $86,708
Average annual cost of living in city: $42,655
Woonsocket sits along the Rhode Island-Massachusetts border, about 15 miles north of Providence. Annual healthcare costs around $5,400, and you can expect to pay roughly $530 each month for groceries.
Also Find:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 11th
Average annual cost of living in state: $86,785
Average annual cost of living in city: $42,706
You'll find the town of East Hartford across the Connecticut River from Hartford, the state capital. Despite its relative cheapness compared to state averages, East Hartford exceeds national averages for groceries ($524 a month), healthcare ($7,021 a year), utilities ($463 a month) and transportation ($6,938 a year).
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 10th
Average annual cost of living in state: $87,017
Average annual cost of living in city: $43,374
Rochester sits on the eastern edge of New Hampshire, about an hour drive east of Concord. You can save around $40,000 a year living here compared to the state average, but monthly rent will still run you $1,700+ a month.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 9th
Average annual cost of living in state: $88,254
Average annual cost of living in city: $35,811
Yakima is a city with about 100,000 residents, located about 150 miles southeast of Seattle in south-central Washington. It's significantly cheaper than Seattle and comes in below national averages for grocery costs (about $500 a month) and healthcare costs ($5,352 a year). Rent in Yakima costs $1,260 a month on average.
Read More:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 8th
Average annual cost of living in state: $88,408
Average annual cost of living in city: $49,474
Burlington is located in northwestern Vermont along the shore of Lake Champlain. In this list of cheap cities in expensive states, Burlington is second only to Wahiawa, Hawaii, for the highest average monthly rent with costs of $2,031. Burlington also exceeds national averages for grocery costs ($562 a month), healthcare (nearly $8,000 a year), utilities ($433 a month) and transportation ($5,179 a year).
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 7th
Average annual cost of living in state: $88,563
Average annual cost of living in city: $42,685
Millville is part of the state's South Jersey region. Living here can save you roughly $46,000 a year compared to average state living costs. Monthly rent comes in at $1,638 on average.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 6th
Average annual cost of living in state: $89,104
Average annual cost of living in city: $33,347
Located in western Maryland along the Potomac River, Cumberland has about 19,000 residents. Healthcare costs here — about $5,200 a year — are about 84% of the national median. Monthly rent will run you about $1,034.
See More:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 5th
Average annual cost of living in state: $95,286
Average annual cost of living in city: $31,821
Jamestown sits in southwest New York, about 70 miles southwest of Buffalo. You can find monthly rent here for less than $1,000 (just $913 on average). Your grocery bill will be $480 per month on average.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 4th
Average annual cost of living in state: $95,673
Average annual cost of living in city: $46,262
The only state capital to appear in this list, Anchorage offers relatively reasonable average monthly rent costs of around $1,600. Groceries will run you about $617 a month.
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 3rd
Average annual cost of living in state: $111,901
Average annual cost of living in city: $39,321
You'll find Porterville roughly halfway between Fresno and Bakersfield in the San Joaquin Valley. Porterville's average monthly rent of $1,252 can be tough to find in other parts of the state. Groceries here will cost you just shy of $500 a month, slightly below the national average.
Trending Now:
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 2nd
Average annual cost of living in state: $112,752
Average annual cost of living in city: $33,347
Holyoke is located just north of Springfield in south-central Massachusetts. Monthly rent here will cost you $1,534 on average. You can do well in Holyoke compared to national averages for healthcare ($5,623 a year).
State's ranking on the 'most expensive' list: 1st
Average annual cost of living in state: $144,436
Average annual cost of living in city: $58,317
Wahiawa is a relatively expensive place to live compared to many other U.S. cities, but consider the delta between living here and living in other parts of Hawaii. Located on the island of Oahu, Wahiawa comes in about $86,000 cheaper for annual living costs than the state average. Rent in Wahiawa still costs $2,221 on average, and groceries will cost you nearly $700 a month.
Editor's note: Photos are for representational purposes only and might not reflect the exact locations listed.
Methodology: For this piece GOBankingRates looked at the 2,500 largest cities in terms of housing market size, according to Zillow's March 2025 data. With these cities isolated, GOBankingRates found the city with the cheapest 2025 rent and from there found the annual essentials (Rent, Groceries, Utilities, Transportation, and Healthcare) cost of living for these places. Cost-of-living figures were calculated by first finding the annual average expenditure, as sourced from the Bureau of Labor Statistics 2023 Consumer Expenditure Survey and from there used cost-of-living indices sourced from Sperling's Best Places. For ME, ND, and VT the market size was relaxed to 4,000. All data was collected on and is up to date as of May 14, 2025.
More From GOBankingRates
3 Luxury SUVs That Will Have Massive Price Drops in Summer 2025
6 Popular SUVs That Aren't Worth the Cost -- and 6 Affordable Alternatives
9 Downsizing Tips for the Middle Class To Save on Monthly Expenses
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Here Are the Cheapest Cities To Live in the Most Expensive States

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Is Crypto in a Bubble (Again)?
Is Crypto in a Bubble (Again)?

Gizmodo

time34 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

Is Crypto in a Bubble (Again)?

The crypto world is buzzing. If you ask a true believer, they'll say this is just the beginning. Ask a skeptic, and they'll swear we're watching a bubble inflate in real time. One that could pop any second. I saw the excitement firsthand at a crypto event in Brooklyn last week. The bar was packed. People were animated. It felt like a flashback to 2020 and 2021, when crypto fever gripped everyone from twenty-something retail traders to grandparents. Back then, it was all about Bitcoin, flashy NFTs like the Bored Ape Yacht Club, and anything promising wild returns. It was a digital casino where everyone hoped to strike it rich. Fast. But then came the crash. The 'crypto winter' arrived, marked by the spectacular downfall of crypto exchange FTX and its poster boy Sam Bankman-Fried. Billions vanished. Trust collapsed. Regulators circled. Now? The energy is back. And it's confusing. At the Brooklyn event, hosted by Wire Network (a startup trying to connect different crypto systems, or 'blockchains'), the optimism was palpable. 'There's never been a better time to be a crypto developer,' co-founder Ken DiCross told me. On paper, crypto's comeback looks unstoppable. The industry's total market value has ballooned by over $3 trillion since the start of 2023. Companies like Robinhood, Coinbase, and MicroStrategy are riding the wave. Circle Internet Group, the firm behind one of the biggest 'stablecoins,' went public in June at a $6 billion valuation. It shot up to nearly $50 billion in just weeks. Wait, what's a stablecoin? A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency designed to hold a steady value, usually pegged to something like the U.S. dollar. The idea is to give people the speed and flexibility of crypto without the wild price swings of Bitcoin or Ethereum. In theory, you could use stablecoins instead of cash to buy your coffee or pay your rent. In reality, we're not there yet. But the bet from crypto firms is clear: one day, we'll all use digital dollars instead of paper ones. That's what's driving today's gold rush. The question is: Are people getting ahead of themselves? Much of the current hype centers on DeFi, short for decentralized finance. Think of it as an attempt to rebuild Wall Street without the banks. Instead of a bank approving your loan or handling your trades, code does it. No middlemen, no gatekeepers. Sounds revolutionary, but so far, it's mostly been a playground for speculators and tech geeks. Then there are the Bitcoin treasury companies. These are regular businesses that are loading up their balance sheets with Bitcoin instead of dollars, euros, or gold. MicroStrategy is the poster child, spending billions to buy Bitcoin and turning itself from a sleepy software company into a kind of crypto hedge fund. The idea is that Bitcoin will outpace inflation and fiat currencies over the long run. There's no clear answer. The numbers are dizzying. The hype is real. And yet, there's still so much uncertainty about whether crypto's grand promises will ever match reality. Even with a crypto-friendly president in the White House, the road to replacing cash or Wall Street is long. So, is this a bubble? Maybe. Maybe not. It depends on who you ask.

BofA Securities Initiates Analysis on Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (KNSL) with a ‘Buy' Rating
BofA Securities Initiates Analysis on Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (KNSL) with a ‘Buy' Rating

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

BofA Securities Initiates Analysis on Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (KNSL) with a ‘Buy' Rating

Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (NYSE:KNSL) is one of the best stocks added to a . A business executive reviewing insurance policy documents with a customer. Amid the company's consistent underwriting discipline, strong ROEs above 20%, and expanding market share in the E&S segment, BofA initiated coverage on Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (NYSE:KNSL) with a 'Buy' rating and a $543 price target on June 21, 2025. The analyst described the company as a 'compounding business', implying that its business model and financial performance are expected to build upon themselves and grow over time, generating increasing value. Furthermore, the analyst acknowledged that Kinsale Capital Group, Inc.'s (NYSE:KNSL) growth will slow temporarily; however, it sees this as a short-term issue that doesn't impact the company's long-term potential. Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. (NYSE:KNSL) offers a wide range of specialty products across commercial and personal insurance segments by operating all across the U.S. While we acknowledge the potential of KNSL as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the . READ NEXT: 10 Overlooked Tech Stocks to Buy Now and 10 Low Risk High Reward Stocks Set to Triple by 2030. Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store