Stockholm Cost of Living vs Salary

Urban Stress Index: 49.88

Is Stockholm an affordable place to live? A typical resident spends around 39.0% of income on rent and 10.8% on food. That leaves approximately 50.1% of income available for savings and daily expenses.

The Urban Stress Index (USI) provides a structured way to evaluate cost-of-living pressure in Stockholm. 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.

Cost Breakdown

ItemMonthly% of Income
Income 39,500
Rent (1BR) 15,425 39.0%
Essential Food 4,277 10.8%
Remaining 19,798 50.1%

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Cost Structure Analysis

Stockholm records a USI of 49.88, placing it in the high burden category and making it the clear affordability outlier within Sweden. The city’s structure is strongly housing-led. Rent absorbs about 39.1% of a typical monthly gross salary, while essential food adds another 10.8%. That means roughly half of income is already committed to core essentials before transport, utilities, or savings are considered. In practical terms, Stockholm is not simply an expensive Nordic capital in absolute terms. It is a city where housing has become structurally heavy relative to salary even inside a high-income welfare-state economy. This is why Stockholm feels much tighter than the rest of urban Sweden and much less relaxed than the Scandinavian social model might suggest from the outside.

The city’s economic structure explains both its attraction and its pressure. Stockholm combines finance, technology, government, higher education, media, professional services, and corporate headquarters in Sweden’s dominant metropolitan labor market. That gives it stronger wage support than Gothenburg, Malmo, or Uppsala. But it also concentrates so much demand, prestige, and national opportunity that housing remains far more aggressive than in the rest of the Swedish system. Compared with Berlin or Hamburg, Stockholm is clearly more compressed because rent takes a much larger share of salary. Compared with Amsterdam, Stockholm is more manageable overall, but it still belongs to the same broader category of high-demand northwestern European capitals where housing dominates the affordability story.

Within Sweden, Stockholm stands distinctly above the rest. Malmo, Uppsala, and Gothenburg all remain stretched, but none of them reach Stockholm’s high-burden range. That difference is crucial for the national narrative. Sweden is not a country where every major city looks heavily distorted. Instead, the capital is the main pressure point, while the secondary cities remain noticeably more controlled. Compared with Uppsala, Stockholm has a much heavier rent burden despite the two cities being linked through labor-market geography and education. Compared with Gothenburg, Stockholm is much tighter because the capital’s housing premium is stronger relative to salary. Compared with Malmo, it remains clearly more pressured even though both sit in internationally connected urban environments.

Internationally, Stockholm compares worse than most German cities and many French regional cities, but still better than Dublin, London, or Toronto-type severe stress cases. Overall, Stockholm is best understood as a housing-dominated high-burden Nordic capital. Food matters, but it is secondary. The real issue is that housing has become too large a claim on income even in Sweden’s strongest metropolitan economy, which makes Stockholm the clearest affordability exception inside an otherwise more controlled national urban system.

Methodology

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.

Sources

Income data for Swedish cities are based on Average monthly salary in the municipalities - Statistikdatabasen, published by Statistics Sweden (SCB), using municipality-level average monthly salary as the income benchmark for each city.

Rental data are based on Numbeo’s Apartment (1 bedroom) in City Centre price, used as the housing benchmark for each Swedish city.

Food cost estimates use Numbeo’s Meal at an Inexpensive Restaurant price as a standardized essential meal-cost proxy.

For full explanation of assumptions, see the Methodology and Sources pages.

See Related Cities

Other cities in Sweden:

Other cities outside Sweden:

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