Is Lisbon an affordable place to live? A typical resident spends around 85.0% of income on rent and 19.9% on food. That leaves approximately -4.9% of income available for savings and daily expenses.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) provides a structured way to evaluate cost-of-living pressure in Lisbon. By combining housing and essential food costs, it highlights how much income is required to maintain a basic standard of living relative to local wages.
| Item | Monthly | % of Income |
|---|---|---|
| Income | 1,571 | — |
| Rent (1BR) | 1,336 | 85.0% |
| Essential Food | 312 | 19.9% |
| Remaining | -77 | -4.9% |
Use our cost of living calculator to estimate your own disposable income in Lisbon.
Lisbon records a USI above 100, placing it in the critical category and indicating that essential costs can exceed a typical local income. This level of pressure is not driven by unusually high absolute prices. Compared with major western European capitals, Lisbon’s rent and food costs remain moderate in nominal terms. However, the key issue is the relationship between these costs and local wages. Rent alone absorbs around 85% of income, while food adds a further 19–20%, leaving a negative residual for savings and other expenses.
This imbalance reflects the structure of Lisbon’s housing market and labor market. Housing demand has been pushed up by tourism, international buyers, and remote workers, leading rents to rise toward levels seen in higher-income European cities. At the same time, wages remain tied to Portugal’s national income distribution, which is significantly lower. Compared with Porto, Lisbon is more compressed due to higher rent levels. Compared with Madrid and Barcelona, Lisbon shows a similar pattern of pressure, but with weaker income support.
Within Portugal, Lisbon stands clearly above all other cities in terms of affordability pressure. Secondary cities such as Porto and Braga remain strained but do not reach the same level of imbalance. The difference is not that Lisbon is uniquely expensive, but that it concentrates international housing demand on top of a relatively low domestic wage base. This results in a cost structure where moderate prices become unaffordable when measured against local earnings.
Internationally, Lisbon aligns with cities where affordability is constrained by income rather than by absolute price levels. Unlike cities such as Paris or Amsterdam, where higher costs are partly offset by stronger wages, Lisbon’s pressure comes from limited income capacity. Overall, Lisbon is best understood as an income-constrained city where housing costs have outpaced local earning power.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) measures how much of a typical income is spent on housing and essential food.
USI = Housing burden + Food cost share.
See full methodology here.
Income, rental, and food cost data for Portugal are compiled from national statistics, rental market data, and consumer price datasets.
For full methodology and assumptions, see Methodology and Sources.
Other cities in Portugal:
Cities with similar affordability outside Portugal: