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Cost of Living in Utah

Overall index: 99.5 — ranked #22 of 51 (near the national average).

Where your money goes in Utah

Estimated spending breakdown on a $75,000 salary in Utah

Housing$26,928
Groceries$9,448
Utilities$4,326
Transportation$12,492
Healthcare$5,454
Dining & Misc$7,268
Savings$9,750
Discretionary$0

Estimated annual spending: $65,916($9,084 remaining)

What things cost in Utah

Item Utah US Average Difference
Median home price $480,000 $360,000 +$120,000
Average 2BR rent $1,523/mo $1,400/mo +$123
Gas (regular) $3.40/gal $3.50/gal $0.10
Electric bill $88/mo $137/mo $49
Infant childcare $13,094/yr $13,500/yr $406
Dozen eggs $4.80 $4.95 $0.15
Monthly groceries $397/mo $410/mo $13

Sources: AAA gas prices, EIA electricity, Zillow ZHVI, Child Care Aware, MERIC/C2ER indices. Eggs and groceries estimated from MERIC grocery index applied to BLS averages.

Cost of living index by category

National average = 100 for each category

Housing 108.8
Groceries 96.9
Utilities 82.4
Transportation 104.1
Healthcare 90.9
Dining & Misc 96.9
National average (100)

Salary equivalent: Utah vs national average

What a salary in Utah is actually worth in national-average purchasing power.

Salary Purchasing power Difference
$50,000 $49,750 $-250
$75,000 $74,625 $-375
$100,000 $99,500 $-500
$125,000 $124,375 $-625
$150,000 $149,250 $-750
$200,000 $199,000 $-1,000

Negative difference means your money goes further in Utah than the national average.

Compare Utah with other states

FAQ

What is the cost of living in Utah?

Utah has an overall cost-of-living index of 99.5, making it near the national average (ranked #22 of 51 states, where #1 is most expensive). The national average is 100. Housing is the biggest factor — median home prices are $480,000 and average 2-bedroom rent is $1,523/month.

Is Utah expensive to live in?

Utah is near the national average with an overall cost-of-living index of 99.5 (average = 100). Some categories may be higher or lower than average.

How much does housing cost in Utah?

The median home price in Utah is $480,000 and average 2-bedroom rent is $1,523/month. Utah's housing index is 108.8 (national average = 100), meaning housing is 8.799999999999997% above the national average.

How much are groceries in Utah?

Utah's grocery index is 96.9 (national average = 100). A dozen eggs costs approximately $4.80 and a typical monthly grocery bill for a household runs about $397, compared to the national average of $410.

What is the average electric bill in Utah?

The average monthly electric bill in Utah is $88 based on the state's residential rate of 9.97¢/kWh and average household consumption of 886 kWh/month (EIA 2024).

How much does childcare cost in Utah?

Center-based infant childcare in Utah averages $13,094/year ($1,091/month). The national average is approximately $13,500/year. This data is from Child Care Aware of America's 2024 report.

What salary do I need to live comfortably in Utah?

A $75,000 salary in Utah has the same purchasing power as $75,377 at the national average cost of living. Your salary goes about as far as the national average. Use the calculator above with your specific salary to see how it compares.

Where does this data come from?

Cost-of-living indices are from the MERIC/C2ER 2025 Annual Average. Dollar amounts use AAA gas prices (March 2025), EIA electricity rates (2024), Child Care Aware childcare costs (2024), Zillow home values (2024-2025), and BEA Regional Price Parities.

Related tools

Based on MERIC/C2ER 2025 indices, AAA gas prices (March 2025), EIA electricity rates (2024), Child Care Aware childcare costs (2024), and Zillow home values (2024-2025). Individual costs vary by city, neighborhood, and lifestyle.