How Much Does It Cost to Live in Chicago — Budget for Singles and Families (2026)

Real monthly expenses: rent, food, transportation, health insurance — with example amounts for different neighborhoods.

Chicago is one of the cheapest large cities in the USA — it costs 30–50% less than NYC or San Francisco, but twice as much as Warsaw. Here is the real budget for 2026.

Rent — the Biggest Expense

Rates by Neighborhood

  • Jackowo / Avondale / Belmont Cragin (Polish neighborhoods) — 1-bed: 1,100–1,500 USD; 2-bed: 1,400–1,900 USD
  • Logan Square / Wicker Park (trendy) — 1-bed: 1,800–2,500 USD; 2-bed: 2,400–3,200 USD
  • The Loop / River North (downtown) — 1-bed: 2,000–3,500 USD; 2-bed: 3,000–5,000 USD
  • Lincoln Park / Lakeview — 1-bed: 1,800–2,600 USD
  • Pilsen / Bridgeport (alternative) — 1-bed: 1,200–1,700 USD
  • Niles / Park Ridge / Norridge (Polish suburbs) — 2-bed: 1,500–2,200 USD; house: 2,200–3,500 USD

Standard landlord requirements: income 3x rent, deposit = 1 month's rent, credit score 620+.

Utilities and Internet

  • Electricity (ComEd) — 60–150 USD/month (summer AC increases)
  • Gas (Peoples Gas) — 30–100 USD/month (winter is expensive)
  • Water — often included in rent
  • Internet (Xfinity, RCN) — 50–80 USD/month
  • Phone (Mint Mobile, T-Mobile) — 15–50 USD/month

Total utilities + internet + phone for 1 person: 150–280 USD/month.

Food

Stores

  • Polish stores (Andy's, Bobak's, Rich's Deli) — cheapest for Polish products
  • Aldi, Jewel-Osco — cheapest general options
  • Mariano's, Whole Foods — more expensive, better quality
  • Costco, Sam's Club — wholesale, membership 60 USD/year

Monthly Budget

  • Single cooking at home: 350–500 USD
  • Single eating some meals out: 500–800 USD
  • Couple: 600–900 USD
  • Family of 4: 900–1,400 USD

Transportation

Without a Car

  • CTA Monthly Pass — 75 USD/month (bus + subway)
  • Uber/Lyft occasionally — 100–200 USD/month

With a Car

  • Lease or loan payment — 350–700 USD/month
  • Insurance — 100–250 USD/month (depends on age, experience, history)
  • Fuel — 100–200 USD/month
  • Parking in the city — 100–250 USD/month (if renting a spot)

Total with a car: 650–1,400 USD/month. In Chicago, it is possible to live without a car in most neighborhoods — CTA and Metra are well-developed.

Health Insurance

Without an employer providing insurance — this is the biggest hidden cost of American life:

  • Marketplace (Healthcare.gov) — from 200 USD/month (with subsidy) to 600 USD/month (without)
  • Medicaid — free for low-income individuals (below 138% of the federal poverty level, for Poles usually only after obtaining a Green Card)
  • Short-term plans — 100–250 USD/month, but limited coverage

Other Fixed Costs

  • Streaming (Netflix, Spotify, YouTube Premium) — 30–60 USD/month total
  • Gym (Planet Fitness) — 10–25 USD/month
  • Laundry (if not in the apartment) — 30–50 USD/month

Summary — Monthly Budget

Single (modest lifestyle)

  • Rent (room in a 2-bed or small studio): 900–1,300 USD
  • Utilities + internet: 200 USD
  • Food: 400 USD
  • Transportation (CTA): 75 USD
  • Health insurance: 250 USD
  • Other (phone, entertainment, miscellaneous): 250 USD
  • Total: 2,075–2,475 USD

Single (comfortable)

  • Rent (1-bed in a good neighborhood): 1,800 USD
  • Car: 800 USD
  • Food and dining: 700 USD
  • Utilities + internet + phone: 280 USD
  • Insurance: 400 USD
  • Entertainment, travel: 500 USD
  • Total: 4,480 USD

Family of 4 (2 adults + 2 children)

  • Rent (3-bed in a Polish suburb): 2,200–3,000 USD
  • Car (2 cars): 1,400 USD
  • Food: 1,200 USD
  • Utilities + internet + phones: 400 USD
  • Family health insurance: 800–1,500 USD
  • Daycare/school (if applicable): 1,000–2,500 USD/child
  • Total: 7,000–10,600 USD (depending on children in care)

Real Income Needed

In Chicago, the real "comfort zone" for a single person is 50–70 thousand USD gross per year; for a family with children 100–150 thousand USD gross per year. Polish neighborhoods allow these amounts to be reduced by 20-30%.

Official sources

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