Is The Hague an affordable place to live? A typical resident spends around 30.8% of income on rent and 8.6% on food. That leaves approximately 60.6% of income available for savings and daily expenses.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) provides a structured way to evaluate cost-of-living pressure in The Hague. 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 | 4,833 | — |
| Rent (1BR) | 1,487 | 30.8% |
| Essential Food | 416 | 8.6% |
| Remaining | 2,930 | 60.6% |
Use our cost of living calculator to estimate your own disposable income in The Hague.
The Hague records a USI of 39.38, placing it in the stretched category and making it one of the more manageable cities in the Dutch system, though still clearly under pressure. The affordability structure is again housing-led. Rent absorbs about 30.8% of a typical monthly gross salary, while essential food takes only 8.6%, which is relatively modest by Benelux standards. That lower food burden helps explain why The Hague remains more functional than Utrecht or Amsterdam. In practical terms, this is not a cheap city, but it is a city where salary support and lower food pressure prevent housing from producing an even worse overall result.
The local economic structure is a major reason for that relative stability. The Hague benefits from public administration, international institutions, legal services, diplomacy, professional services, and a broader white-collar labor market linked to both Dutch governance and international organizations. That gives it a more institutionally supported income base than some other cities in the cluster. Compared with Amsterdam, it is much less compressed because rent is better aligned with salary. Compared with Rotterdam, The Hague looks slightly more balanced because food and housing together take a smaller share of income. Compared with Utrecht, it benefits from a more moderate total burden despite still being inside the same national housing system.
Within the Netherlands, The Hague sits below Amsterdam, Utrecht, Rotterdam, and Eindhoven in overall pressure. That makes it one of the best-performing Dutch cities in the current cluster, but the key point is that it is still stretched rather than comfortable. So even a comparatively successful, institution-heavy Dutch city remains meaningfully constrained. Compared with Brussels, The Hague is notably more manageable because food is lower and the overall ratio between rent and wages is more favorable. Compared with Manchester or Gothenburg, it fits into a similar “not broken, but clearly pressured” range, though for a different structural reason.
Internationally, The Hague compares better than many large capitals, but still worse than the more functional German cases. Overall, The Hague is best understood as a stretched, institution-supported Dutch city where housing remains the main source of pressure, but where salary support and a lower food burden keep the city from sliding into a higher-burden category. It is one of the clearest examples in the Dutch cluster of a city that still works, but only within the limits of a national system where rent remains persistently heavy.
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 data for Dutch cities are based on Glassdoor salary estimates for Mechanical Engineer roles, using mid-level salary ranges as a proxy benchmark across approximately 1–3 years and 4–6 years of experience. These figures are used to estimate a representative monthly gross salary for each city.
Rental data are based on Numbeo’s Apartment (1 bedroom) in City Centre price, used as the housing benchmark for each Dutch 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.
Other cities in the Netherlands:
Other cities outside the Netherlands: