2026 Cost of Living · United States

Cost of Living in Salt Lake City, UT

A complete 2026 breakdown of what it actually costs to live in Salt Lake City — rent, groceries, transportation, healthcare, utilities, and taxes. With median salaries, cost-comparison tables, and tips for making it work.

Salt Lake City at a Glance (2026)

41%
below US avg
$2000
1BR rent (center)
$3200
3BR rent (suburb)
$224
Monthly groceries
$100
Monthly transit
$106
Utilities/month

Detailed Cost Breakdown (2026)

Housing

Rent is the single biggest expense in Salt Lake City. Here's what to expect:

Housing TypeMonthly Cost
Studio (city center)$1500
1-bedroom (city center)$2000
1-bedroom (outside center)$1560
3-bedroom (city center)$3700
3-bedroom (outside center)$3200

Rent in Salt Lake City is below compared to the US national average. The most affordable neighborhoods tend to be the outer suburbs, with the city center commanding a premium.

Groceries

A single adult in Salt Lake City typically spends $224/month on groceries. A family of four: $627/month. The biggest variables are:

Transportation

Public transit: $100/month for a pass. Gas (if you drive): $3.50-$4.50/gallon. Average commute: 27 minutes. Many Salt Lake City residents use a combination of transit + biking + occasional car-share.

Utilities

Average utilities (electric, gas, water, internet) for a 1-bedroom apartment: $106/month. Internet alone: $60-100/month. Cell phone: $50-80/month.

Healthcare

Healthcare in United States costs vary significantly. In the US, a single adult typically pays $300-600/month for health insurance (with employer contribution), plus $30-50 copays. In Canada, healthcare is publicly funded, but private plans for dental/vision cost $50-150/month.

Childcare

Full-time daycare in Salt Lake City: $800-$1,500/month per child. This is often the second-largest expense for families. Many United States provinces offer subsidized daycare at $10-15/day (significantly less than market rate).

What Salary Do You Need?

The 3x rent rule is a common baseline. For Salt Lake City:

Annual Pre-Tax SalaryComfort Level
Under 42,000Tight — covers basics
63,000 - 84,000Comfortable single
84,000 - 126,000Comfortable family of 4
126,000+Comfortable + savings

Cost Comparison: Salt Lake City vs Other Major Cities

CityCost Index (US avg = 100)
New York, NY187
San Francisco, CA178
Salt Lake City59
Chicago, IL124
Austin, TX130
Phoenix, AZ117
Houston, TX118

Tips for Living in Salt Lake City on a Budget

  1. Live just outside the city center. You can save 30-40% on rent by living in a neighboring suburb that's a 20-min transit ride from the action.
  2. Use free activities. Salt Lake City parks, libraries, museums, and trails are free or low-cost. The "free" entertainment can offset a higher cost of living.
  3. Buy groceries in bulk. Costco or Sam's Club memberships pay for themselves if you're buying for a family.
  4. Use public transit if available. A monthly pass is much cheaper than car payments + insurance + gas + parking.
  5. Negotiate your salary. Use our Am I Underpaid? tool to see if you're being paid market rate for your role in Salt Lake City.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Salt Lake City expensive?

Salt Lake City is 41% below the US national average cost of living. Rent is the biggest factor. For a 1-bedroom apartment in the city center, expect to pay around $2000/month. For a 3-bedroom outside the center, around $3200/month.

What salary do I need to live in Salt Lake City?

A common rule is the 3x rent rule. For Salt Lake City, with median rent around $2000, you need a pre-tax salary of around $84000 to live comfortably. This is roughly the 35% percentile of household incomes in UT.

Is Salt Lake City a good place to live?

Salt Lake City offers good value relative to major metros. Cost of living is below the national average. The city's economy is driven by manufacturing and healthcare, and the job market is stable.

⚠️ Estimate only. Cost data based on 2026 averages from Numbeo, BestPlaces, and local sources. Your actual costs may vary by lifestyle, neighborhood, and personal situation. Full disclaimer.