UK cost of living conversations focus on London, but the spread between London and other UK cities is wider than people realize. Living the same lifestyle costs 40-60% less in Manchester or Edinburgh than London. Here’s the 2026 reality city by city.
Last verified: May 6, 2026.
London (Zone 1-2 expat lifestyle)
Rent + utilities — £1,800-2,800/month
- 1-bedroom in trendy area (Hackney, Brixton, Hackney Wick, Peckham, Bermondsey): £1,500-2,200/month
- 1-bedroom in central (Soho, Covent Garden, Marylebone): £2,500-4,000/month
- 1-bedroom in zones 3-4 (Crystal Palace, Walthamstow, Tooting): £1,200-1,700/month
- Council tax: £100-180/month depending on band
- Energy bills: £150-280/month average
- Internet: £25-40/month
- Total housing: £1,800-2,800/month for typical expat 1-bed lifestyle
Food + groceries — £450-650/month
- Groceries (mostly cooking): £200-300/month per person
- Restaurant + takeaway 4-5x/week: £200-350/month
- Coffee shop visits (£3-4 per coffee): £60-100/month
- Drinks (1 cocktail at proper cocktail bar = £14-18): £80-150/month if going out
Transport — £150-250/month
- Oyster card monthly travelcard (zones 1-2): £170 (zones 1-3 = £200, 1-4 = £247)
- Cycling alternative: bike + maintenance £30/month average
- Uber occasional: £50-150/month
- Train trips outside London: add £40-120 if you travel monthly
Healthcare — £20-150/month
- NHS (with Skilled Worker visa or ILR): free at point of use
- Dental NHS: £25 for check-up, £80+ treatment. Many use private (£100-300/year)
- Optical: £25 eye test, glasses £100-300+
- Private health insurance (BUPA, AXA, Vitality): £100-300/month if you want faster access
- IHS (visa surcharge): £1,035/year already paid upfront
Entertainment + lifestyle — £200-500/month
- Cinema (regular visits): £40-80/month (Vue, Curzon)
- Gym membership: £30-100/month (Gymbox, Soho House, premium)
- Streaming subscriptions (Netflix, Disney+, Spotify): £30-50/month
- Theatre + events: £50-200/month if active
- Travel within UK + day trips: £100-300/month
Total London budget tiers
- Frugal student: £1,800-2,400/month (shared house, mostly cooking, no expensive lifestyle)
- Mid-career professional: £2,800-3,800/month (1-bed, regular dining out, occasional travel)
- Comfortable expat: £4,000-5,500/month (nicer 1-bed, lots of restaurants, gym, travel)
- High-earning lifestyle: £6,000-9,000+/month (Mayfair/Knightsbridge, fine dining, etc.)
Manchester (UK’s 2nd city)
Manchester’s cost is 40-50% lower than London for similar quality of life. Major tech hub since 2018, growing media + finance presence.
Real numbers
- Rent (1-bed in city centre, Northern Quarter, Castlefield): £900-1,400/month
- Rent (1-bed in suburbs, Salford Quays, Didsbury): £700-1,100/month
- Council tax: £80-130/month
- Total housing: £1,000-1,600/month
- Groceries + dining: £350-550/month
- Transport (annual pass): £750/year (£62/month) for trams + buses
- Total mid-range: £1,800-2,800/month
- Same lifestyle vs London: 35-45% cheaper
Where Manchester wins: tech jobs at MediaCity, growing fintech (Revolut + Monzo offices), cheap great food (Mowgli, Khan’s, El Capo), excellent music scene + culture, easy access to Lake District + Wales.
Edinburgh (Scottish capital)
Edinburgh has the highest expat satisfaction scores of UK cities outside London. Smaller, walkable, cultural hub.
Real numbers
- Rent (1-bed in New Town, Stockbridge): £900-1,400/month
- Rent (1-bed in Marchmont, Bruntsfield, Leith): £750-1,100/month
- Total housing: £1,000-1,600/month
- Total mid-range lifestyle: £1,900-2,900/month
- Same lifestyle vs London: 30-40% cheaper
Where Edinburgh wins: gorgeous Old + New Town, festival culture year-round, university scene, easy day trips to Highlands + East Coast. Catch: smaller job market than Manchester or London.
Other UK city cost-of-living snapshots
Bristol
- 1-bed rent: £1,000-1,500/month
- Total mid-range: £2,000-3,000/month
- Strengths: creative culture, growing tech scene, mild climate, near coast
Birmingham
- 1-bed rent: £700-1,200/month
- Total mid-range: £1,700-2,700/month
- Strengths: very cheap, growing post-HS2 investment, central UK location
Leeds
- 1-bed rent: £700-1,100/month
- Total mid-range: £1,600-2,600/month
- Strengths: growing tech sector, university scene, good music scene
Glasgow
- 1-bed rent: £750-1,200/month
- Total mid-range: £1,700-2,700/month
- Strengths: cheaper than Edinburgh, art + music culture, friendly people
Brighton
- 1-bed rent: £1,200-1,800/month (premium for seaside)
- Total mid-range: £2,300-3,400/month
- Strengths: seaside, cultural scene, hour from London
Hidden costs new arrivals don’t budget for
- Setup costs first 2-3 months: deposit (5-week equivalent), council tax registration, utility setup, furniture if unfurnished. £3,000-6,000 for London, £1,500-3,000 elsewhere
- Mobile phone contract setup: needs UK address + sometimes credit history. Use Monzo/Revolut as workaround initially. £25-50/month plans
- Initial UK transport (no Oyster): single tickets cost 3-4x daily passes. Get Oyster/contactless on arrival
- Banking setup time: high street banks (HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds) often refuse short-stay visa holders. Use Monzo, Starling, Revolut from week 1
- Council tax: mandatory, must register within first month. Single occupancy discount = 25% off
- BBC TV License: £159/year if you watch BBC iPlayer. Even if you only watch online streaming
- Visa surcharge IHS: already paid up front, but you may need additional health insurance for things NHS doesn’t cover (private dental, alternative therapies)
Saving + investing on a UK income
UK income tax framework relevant to expat planners:
- Personal Allowance: £12,570 tax-free (2026)
- Basic rate (20%): £12,570-£50,270
- Higher rate (40%): £50,270-£125,140
- Additional rate (45%): above £125,140
- National Insurance: 8% on £12,570-£50,270, then 2%
- Auto-enrolment pension: minimum 8% combined (5% you + 3% employer). Common employers contribute 5-10%
- ISA allowance: £20,000/year tax-free savings/investments
- SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension): £60,000/year max contribution with tax relief
How to live well in UK on lower-tier salaries
- Outside London: a £35,000-45,000 salary = comfortable middle-class lifestyle. London needs £55,000+ for similar comfort
- Live in zones 3-4 of London: save £400-700/month on rent vs zone 1-2
- Cook 5+ meals/week: grocery cooking costs ~£100/week vs £150-200 dining out equivalent
- Use NHS not private health: world-class care free at point of use. Private only if you want to skip NHS waiting times for non-urgent care
- Skip the car: in major UK cities, public transport beats car ownership. Save £4,000-6,000/year
- Use cycle-to-work scheme: tax-efficient bike purchase through employer (saves 20-40% on bike cost)
Related: UK Skilled Worker visa · UK banks for foreigners.
✓ Last verified: May 6, 2026.