The Most Expensive States To Live In—Ranked According To Data

The Most Expensive States To Live In—Ranked According To Data

America's Cost Of Living Showdown

Ever wondered where your paycheck stretches the furthest—or disappears the fastest? Well, you’re in the right place. Using the Q1 2025 Cost of Living Index (COLI) from the Missouri Economic Research and Information Center (MERIC), we’ve ranked every U.S. state from the cheapest to the most expensive. 

A COLI score below 100 means your dollar goes further than the national average; above 100 means you’ll be paying more for everyday life. Each slide shows the COLI, plus four key expense categories—housing, groceries, utilities, and transportation—along with a quick insight into what makes the state affordable… or painfully pricey.

Let's begin...

Most Expensive States Msn

Advertisement

50: Oklahoma

COLI: 85.5
Housing: 70.5 | Groceries: 95.7 | Utilities: 94.7 | Transportation: 86.7
Rock-bottom housing and reasonable utility rates make Oklahoma the most affordable state in America.

1755493364d5dd26e2da1df997875ef1c4e6bfe3ac7eb12e76.JPGUrbanative, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

49: Mississippi

COLI: 87.3
Housing: 72.5 | Groceries: 95.9 | Utilities: 89.7 | Transportation: 89.5
The cheapest housing market in the country keeps Mississippi firmly at the low-cost end.

1755493407e236fcc2e19a61d6682bb0733f24ba3eacb96e68.jpgKkmurray, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

48: Alabama

COLI: 87.6
Housing: 69.1 | Groceries: 97.6 | Utilities: 98.8 | Transportation: 91.9
Extremely affordable housing offsets average costs in other categories.

17554934918c48ff4dcc569150674e38d571243a443ba1bf69.jpgWeaponizingArchitecture, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

47: Missouri

COLI: 88.0
Housing: 74.8 | Groceries: 96.7 | Utilities: 97.5 | Transportation: 87.2
Missouri’s balanced affordability keeps it in the top five cheapest states.

1755493623734d4956be06fa868a25ec47c904e65101652c1f.jpgDaniel Schwen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

46: West Virginia

COLI: 88.6
Housing: 71.6 | Groceries: 96.7 | Utilities: 92.2 | Transportation: 96.0
One of the lowest housing indexes in the nation anchors West Virginia’s affordability.

1755493687ac541da4106dde4b6e01cd50fe6d39740bbd380d.jpgTim Kiser (w:User:Malepheasant), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

45: Iowa

COLI: 89.6
Housing: 77.7 | Groceries: 95.7 | Utilities: 89.5 | Transportation: 95.5
Affordable homes and utilities make Iowa a wallet-friendly choice.

1755493784ed698e00aa3cf8dacbf0b30a07dc5b093fb3b630.jpgBillwhittaker (talk), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

44: Kansas

COLI: 89.7
Housing: 75.6 | Groceries: 96.5 | Utilities: 100.4 | Transportation: 90.2
Low housing costs counterbalance slightly higher utility rates.

1755493878b5df55ad3b9f7342dd6de79363a697132a5e97c3.jpgPam Broviak from Geneva, IL, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

43: Michigan

COLI: 89.8
Housing: 73.9 | Groceries: 98.9 | Utilities: 97.4 | Transportation: 100.6
Budget-friendly housing keeps Michigan near the bottom for living costs.

1755493952dec8022d1d4c597bf088f39bb7d90c5f01625a3c.jpgCrisco 1492, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement
F

History's most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

42: Tennessee

COLI: 90.0
Housing: 81.5 | Groceries: 96.7 | Utilities: 87.9 | Transportation: 89.3
Affordable utilities and transportation help keep Tennessee cheap.

1755494003946e2574ed1d8202b990a1be4987cc960fcda2c9.JPGImilious, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

41: Arkansas

COLI: 90.5
Housing: 79.2 | Groceries: 95.1 | Utilities: 92.2 | Transportation: 92.4
Housing and groceries both trend well below the national average.

1755494045d75f2d6ea1face0236c6228d4e159049d6bbe27b.jpgYinan Chen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

40: North Dakota

COLI: 90.8
Housing: 76.9 | Groceries: 97.2 | Utilities: 84.6 | Transportation: 97.6
Low utility costs help North Dakota stay affordable.

1755494093894a0d180be6f1328af7dbe2cb56bc2f83efae35.jpgRon Reiring, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

39: Indiana

COLI: 90.8
Housing: 76.0 | Groceries: 98.0 | Utilities: 94.2 | Transportation: 99.4
Budget housing is the main reason Indiana stays well below the national average.

1755494148efaf50b626aca4219e44b2a807b07c34117d4340.jpgCarol M. Highsmith, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

38: Kentucky

COLI: 91.7
Housing: 75.0 | Groceries: 99.7 | Utilities: 87.3 | Transportation: 95.2
Low housing costs make up for slightly pricier groceries.

1755494196f4b1b6f6d1b3faa43cc304a4de7c69b4c2f6503d.jpgKen Lund from Reno, Nevada, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

37: Georgia

COLI: 91.7
Housing: 79.7 | Groceries: 97.7 | Utilities: 102.6 | Transportation: 97.6
Utilities are a bit high, but housing keeps Georgia affordable.

1755494265a2ca9280f5299c7bef075e411e0b4fb6165adfe7.JPGknown per ticket, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

36: Texas

COLI: 91.8
Housing: 80.0 | Groceries: 95.8 | Utilities: 103.3 | Transportation: 92.1
Texas benefits from reasonable housing despite higher utilities.

1755494372d6c648419746a3b6b36cbf9289fc41281936b1b2.jpgBenjaminMonroy, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

35: Nebraska

COLI: 92.4
Housing: 78.6 | Groceries: 98.9 | Utilities: 90.0 | Transportation: 95.0
Affordable housing and utilities keep Nebraska costs low.

17554944290a7d900b46077ef7047a95469645655eef6bf57a.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

34: Louisiana

COLI: 93.2
Housing: 84.0 | Groceries: 96.7 | Utilities: 81.4 | Transportation: 97.7
Utilities are significantly cheaper here than the national average.

1755494479124854b3124d266de39f4750af6f25dac264fd50.jpgMichael Maples, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

33: Minnesota

COLI: 93.7
Housing: 79.8 | Groceries: 100.7 | Utilities: 95.4 | Transportation: 96.1
Housing offsets slightly expensive groceries.

175549453273447c267a735a2a14a422424926bcdc7aa759cb.jpgJon Platek, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

32: New Mexico

COLI: 94.2
Housing: 90.2 | Groceries: 97.9 | Utilities: 84.1 | Transportation: 92.5
Cheap utilities are a big cost-saving factor in New Mexico.

175549457677d12119dce3900abea3841844679a734b718bd1.jpgRon Reiring, Wikimedia Commons

31: South Carolina

COLI: 94.6
Housing: 84.9 | Groceries: 98.9 | Utilities: 96.3 | Transportation: 96.1
Housing and utilities make South Carolina an affordable southern option.

17554946562c55ddd33d335a4228719f21ffa103b87a3a85b5.jpgAkhenaton06, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

30: Illinois

COLI: 94.7
Housing: 84.8 | Groceries: 98.5 | Utilities: 97.3 | Transportation: 100.0
Low housing keeps Illinois cheaper than its neighbors.

17554946995f384705fa8cd1d9ea0bdde4fcf98c004f7a12a9.jpgKen Lund from Reno, Nevada, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

29: Ohio

COLI: 95.1
Housing: 86.7 | Groceries: 99.6 | Utilities: 97.1 | Transportation: 99.9
Ohio’s housing market is the main affordability driver.

17554947432df77a15ce65df59335d3b7c0189d04dc1db1191.JPGPi.1415926535, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

28: Montana

COLI: 96.4
Housing: 92.4 | Groceries: 104.5 | Utilities: 80.4 | Transportation: 98.5
Low utilities offset higher grocery costs.

1755494800b59297c7b299fef48abaee569a543f0ec44becd1.jpgJames St. John, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

27: Wyoming

COLI: 97.0
Housing: 91.2 | Groceries: 101.9 | Utilities: 90.3 | Transportation: 91.8
Affordable utilities and transport balance out grocery prices.

1755494924cc7a5b0411427bb55e8d5f6fbe34c18fa6e3c96e.jpgVasiliymeshko, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

26: South Dakota

COLI: 97.3
Housing: 94.9 | Groceries: 103.4 | Utilities: 87.5 | Transportation: 100.2
Groceries run higher than average, but utilities are very affordable.

17554954370c3296a5291f87b23f75e372a8a24222d5481e91.JPGSeabear70, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

25: Pennsylvania

COLI: 97.5
Housing: 86.8 | Groceries: 97.4 | Utilities: 108.5 | Transportation: 104.5
High utilities and transport offset Pennsylvania’s cheap housing.

1755495601d4e3ee2c2f811752af6ef3b9dffeff09fc7141d3.jpgDllu, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

24: North Carolina

COLI: 97.8
Housing: 94.9 | Groceries: 97.7 | Utilities: 94.7 | Transportation: 92.9
Balanced, affordable costs keep North Carolina below the national average.

1755495669f67f56bda4bf9f6c4f181f77895fd4a4aa2ebdda.jpgHarrison Keely, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

23: Nevada

COLI: 99.5
Housing: 111.3 | Groceries: 102.9 | Utilities: 88.7 | Transportation: 114.4
Cheaper utilities help balance expensive housing and transport.

17554960250b4ba4bf761faa56fc6af9159051ba9dd59439c7.jpgDon Ramey Logan, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

22: Wisconsin

COLI: 99.5
Housing: 99.7 | Groceries: 99.6 | Utilities: 92.4 | Transportation: 99.7
Wisconsin sits right at the national average across categories.

1755496079f41b1c5b37916c2a21d185240fb9148f7617e9a2.jpgDori, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

21: Utah

COLI: 100.5
Housing: 110.8 | Groceries: 98.1 | Utilities: 84.4 | Transportation: 102.1
Low utilities help balance costly housing.

1755496135f943851329b82bd66bb620a9288899a554523fd7.jpgRon Reiring, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

20: Virginia

COLI: 101.4
Housing: 105.2 | Groceries: 98.9 | Utilities: 98.4 | Transportation: 94.7
Virginia edges above the national average mainly due to housing.

17554962135380280fe95a235ec92ceb2bc61079c762e1004f.jpgBdl2001, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

19: Idaho

COLI: 102.0
Housing: 100.2 | Groceries: 104.4 | Utilities: 73.9 | Transportation: 105.3
Lowest utilities in the U.S. offset higher grocery and transport costs.

17554977018381b725691eb6b479a431ecd914cdf31807423f.jpgJyoni Shuler, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

18: Florida

COLI: 102.0
Housing: 106.0 | Groceries: 105.1 | Utilities: 99.3 | Transportation: 101.2
Florida’s sunny lifestyle comes with above-average housing and grocery prices.

17554978793e83151ace3314f549cc0b84f09c407dc58e5615.jpgClément Bardot, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

17: Delaware

COLI: 103.5
Housing: 101.4 | Groceries: 100.1 | Utilities: 99.4 | Transportation: 100.0
Across-the-board average costs push Delaware just above 100.

175549798081e29f49f69c6498e6d86f806709fc42cb97bc84.jpgTim Kiser (User:Malepheasant), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

16: Colorado

COLI: 104.0
Housing: 111.4 | Groceries: 102.6 | Utilities: 88.3 | Transportation: 98.1
Expensive housing is Colorado’s main cost driver.

17554980589894c95c75dbbab3e5ef42207ec8c0f01ceb4280.jpgZenhaus, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

15: Rhode Island

COLI: 109.3
Housing: 111.1 | Groceries: 99.0 | Utilities: 137.5 | Transportation: 96.7
Some of the highest utility costs in the U.S.

1755498128acc1ebfc860c5acc9db7dee06ede2ed9661a0d73.jpgKenneth C. Zirkel, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

14: New Hampshire

COLI: 110.1
Housing: 116.2 | Groceries: 98.8 | Utilities: 120.7 | Transportation: 103.0
Utilities and housing are both well above average.

175549818751458d6784c1fc37d967b5562814c0c3f7bbe07c.JPGP199, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

13: Washington

COLI: 112.0
Housing: 116.8 | Groceries: 108.2 | Utilities: 96.7 | Transportation: 122.4
Transportation and housing dominate Washington’s high costs.

17554982952018203ec6c8ae67deaa4e2b498279ac0861a883.CCarol M. Highsmith, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

12: Arizona

COLI: 112.5
Housing: 134.8 | Groceries: 102.5 | Utilities: 106.4 | Transportation: 104.5
Tight housing markets push Arizona’s costs higher.

17554986624b69c6a302f5457f9d311f9744f3aa7d789852a8.jpgunknown; cleaned up, rotated and levels adjustment by Howcheng., Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

11: Oregon

COLI: 112.7
Housing: 131.2 | Groceries: 105.1 | Utilities: 94.7 | Transportation: 114.7
High housing and transport costs are key drivers here.

175549886792f400fa3911efba89e34d2c6dbf45e5ca7f0efe.jpgBob Heims, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

10: Maine

COLI: 113.4
Housing: 133.2 | Groceries: 100.3 | Utilities: 119.8 | Transportation: 104.3
Utilities and housing lift Maine into the top 10.

175549908260ba869b14ea86f564b5f227b27f1ef2ed43b347.jpgAlex Boykov, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

9: Connecticut

COLI: 113.5
Housing: 120.6 | Groceries: 101.5 | Utilities: 137.6 | Transportation: 103.1
Utility bills make Connecticut a costly place to live.

175549917112b6b85f4c30bfd09cb37e776ae4ef720cf7aeb7.JPGElipongo, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

8: Vermont

COLI: 113.7
Housing: 130.7 | Groceries: 106.4 | Utilities: 114.5 | Transportation: 101.2
Housing, groceries, and utilities all trend high.

1755499259f6f422385708860ddc6b653d2729e37e88b2b30c.jpgNo machine-readable author provided. Cham assumed (based on copyright claims)., Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

7: New Jersey

COLI: 114.8
Housing: 143.3 | Groceries: 102.6 | Utilities: 102.1 | Transportation: 101.4
Housing is New Jersey’s biggest cost burden.

17554993741ea2025d12e4a3c79866a90fae672a0cc4dda634.jpgKing of Hearts, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

6: Maryland

COLI: 114.9
Housing: 133.8 | Groceries: 105.1 | Utilities: 114.4 | Transportation: 103.6
Housing and utilities near D.C. push costs up.

17554997096c9ca835b29fd5c9f39c53b6033c827fa4fceef2.jpgsupermoving from Watford, UK, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

5: New York

COLI: 124.7
Housing: 174.2 | Groceries: 104.1 | Utilities: 100.2 | Transportation: 108.7
New York’s housing market drives much of its expense.

17554998691d953d7ad76972b1588fee0f09c14c18a00acccc.jpgDietmar Rabich, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

4: Alaska

COLI: 127.3
Housing: 131.2 | Groceries: 130.3 | Utilities: 132.1 | Transportation: 115.3
Remote living means higher costs for almost everything.

17554999439d9c55fd3889dc430a89ae45cd79d1ecbf8cd7b4.jpgJack Connaher, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

3: California

COLI: 141.6
Housing: 197.8 | Groceries: 108.8 | Utilities: 140.7 | Transportation: 138.7
Among the priciest housing and utility costs in the country.

1755500219b23dd6c125f1caa0a3304841eb3cf9d030611598.jpgMarshall Astor from San Pedro, United States, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

2: Massachusetts

COLI: 145.1
Housing: 215.0 | Groceries: 102.7 | Utilities: 158.9 | Transportation: 103.0
Housing and utilities put Massachusetts near the top.

1755500302471ad1b12241e2806c7e358d25004f3b6548262c.agrArnoldReinhold, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

1: Hawaii

COLI: 182.3
Housing: 292.1 | Groceries: 134.6 | Utilities: 207.0 | Transportation: 143.1
Isolated location, extreme housing costs, and pricey necessities make Hawaii the costliest state.

File:HawaiiKai.JPGCaracas1830, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

You Might Also Like: 

Ranking The Top 50 Airports In The World, According To Travelers

Ranking The Most Underrated Cities In America—According To Locals

Ranking The States With The Best Public Schools—According To Data

Sources:  12


More from Factinate

More from Factinate




Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.