Is Wellington an affordable place to live? A typical resident spends around 27.5% of income on rent and 11.8% on food. That leaves approximately 60.7% of income available for savings and daily expenses.
The Urban Stress Index (USI) provides a structured way to evaluate cost-of-living pressure in Wellington. 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 | 6,379 | — |
| Rent (1BR) | 1,755 | 27.5% |
| Essential Food | 754 | 11.8% |
| Remaining | 3,870 | 60.7% |
Use our cost of living calculator to estimate your own disposable income in Wellington.
Wellington records an Urban Stress Index of approximately 39.3, placing it in the “Stretched” category but still below Auckland and well below the most strained Canadian cities. Housing absorbs about 27.5% of a typical monthly income, while essential food costs account for around 11.8%. This gives Wellington a distinctive profile: rent pressure is meaningful but not extreme, while food takes a larger share of income than in most Australian cities. The result is a city that feels expensive in day-to-day life, yet still avoids the severe housing-led compression seen in places like Toronto or Vancouver.
Wellington’s economic structure helps support this balance. As New Zealand’s capital, the city has a strong public-sector base, and it also has recognised strength in technology, fintech, gaming, screen production, science, research, and education. This creates a relatively knowledge-intensive labour market, which gives Wellington a more stable earnings base than many smaller cities. At the same time, that income support is not strong enough to push the city into the lower-stress band seen in Canberra.
Within the Australia–New Zealand comparison, Wellington sits in an interesting position. It is more pressured than Canberra, Perth, Adelaide, and Melbourne, but less strained than Auckland and Sydney. In other words, Wellington lands in the middle: clearly expensive relative to income, but not fundamentally broken. Compared with Sydney, Wellington has a lower housing burden but a higher food share. Compared with Auckland, it benefits from a visibly lighter rent burden, which is enough to pull total stress down even though incomes are not high by Australian standards.
The comparison with Canada is particularly favourable. Wellington’s USI is lower than every Canadian city in your table, including Winnipeg, Québec City, and even Edmonton. It also performs better than Winnipeg and Québec City on both housing and food burden, which strongly supports your broader narrative that New Zealand incomes may not look high, but the total affordability picture can still be more manageable than in Canada. This is especially important because Wellington does not achieve this advantage through unusually cheap housing. Rather, it reflects the fact that many Canadian cities now combine worse housing pressure with worse food pressure at the same time. Wellington therefore stands as one of the clearest examples of a smaller high-cost capital city that is still materially less strained than the Canadian urban norm.
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.
Housing data for New Zealand cities are based on Market Rent data from Tenancy Services. Advertised market rents for one-bedroom flats are used directly as the housing proxy for single-person households.
Income data are based on Stats NZ earnings data, using median weekly earnings as the salary benchmark. Weekly figures are converted into monthly gross salary estimates.
Food cost estimates are derived from a standardized meal-price proxy designed to approximate essential living costs for a single person. The measure is based on local restaurant price benchmarks and is converted into a monthly food cost estimate using a consistent methodology across cities.
For full explanation of assumptions, please see the Methodology and Sources pages.
Other cities in New Zealand:
Cities with similar affordability outside New Zealand: