Cost of Living
per year
per month
How Youngstown's prices compare to the US city average across major spending categories.
How far does your salary go in Youngstown?
Your $100,000 in Youngstown has the same purchasing power as $127,178 in the average US city. You'd need $27,178 less here to maintain that standard of living.
Demographics and workforce data from the US Census ACS 5-Year.
bachelor's or higher
Climate, safety, and walkability indicators.
See a side-by-side breakdown of cost of living, housing, and salaries.
Popular comparisons
Sorted by affordability — most affordable first.
Within 10 points of Youngstown's cost index of 79, sorted by closest match.
These are the reasons people actually move to Youngstown, ordered roughly by what shows up loudest in the data. A genuinely affordable place to land and daily errands don't require a car lead, plus 2 more things worth knowing — the rest unpacked below.
Cost of living lands at 79 on the composite index — about 21% under the US average. That's the kind of gap that shows up in the savings rate, not just the rent check. Median rent in town runs about $711/mo against a typical household income of $34,295, which is the kind of ratio that leaves room to save.
With a citywide Walk Score of 67/100, Youngstown sits firmly in the walkable-by-US-standards camp. Pick a central neighborhood and most daily errands happen without keys in your hand.
Average AQI in Youngstown comes in around 42, well into the "good" band. Clean air isn't a thing you appreciate until you've lived somewhere it wasn't — and this is the side of that line you want to be on.
Average commute time in Youngstown runs around 21 minutes one-way — short enough that it doesn't restructure your day. Compared to the 45-plus-minute commutes that are normal in major metros, the difference adds up to a real lifestyle gap.
Reasons are pulled from Youngstown's actual data — Census ACS, BLS, BEA, NOAA, EPA AQS, FBI, and Walk Score. We don't list positives that aren't supported by the numbers, which is why different cities show different sections.
Youngstown does winter the real way. Averages around 23°F keep snow on the ground for weeks at a time, and lakes and rivers tend to freeze hard enough to walk on.
Properly cold. Youngstown's winter sits around 23°F on average — and that's the average, meaning plenty of nights drop well below zero. People here own gear.
Reliably warm. Youngstown's summer averages around 82°F, the kind of heat where you remember to leave the house before noon for outdoor things and accept that the back of your shirt will be wet by lunchtime.
Zone 7, give or take a half-zone. Youngstown's typical winter low puts it in that band on the USDA Hardiness map, which is what nurseries label plants against. Use Zone 7 as your starting filter; the USDA's interactive map is more precise for borderline cases.
Roughly 863 feet (263 m). That's modest elevation — comparable to most inland-Midwest and Southern cities.
Middle of the pack. Youngstown comes in around 3,593 per 100,000, basically the national average. The interesting question is usually which neighborhood, not which city — that's where the real variation lives.
Youngstown is a genuinely affordable city by US standards. The composite index sits at 79 versus the 100 national baseline — about 21% cheaper overall, with housing doing most of the heavy lifting.
In parts, yes. With a citywide Walk Score of 67/100, Youngstown has genuinely walkable neighborhoods alongside more sprawled stretches. If walkability matters to you, the neighborhood choice will matter more than the city-level number.
As a rule of thumb, plan on about $55,041 to live in Youngstown the way a $70,000 earner lives in a typical US city. The math gets less forgiving the lower you go below that. Median rent in Youngstown runs about $711/mo — keeping housing under 30% of gross income points to a similar floor on what you'd want to earn.