Should I Move To
Evansville, Indiana comes in at about 116,906 residents. Cost of living comes out very affordable — 16% below the national average. Rent typically lands near $917/mo, and the median household income is about $49,853. Overall, 40/100 on our composite score, which works out to a D, putting it at #801 nationally.
UrbRank Score · General
Each dimension scored 0-100 against every other US city.
Based on overall cost of living vs. other US cities.
Inverse of violent + property crime rate per 100,000 residents.
Temperate summers & winters, moderate precipitation.
Walk Score — how feasible daily errands are on foot.
Unemployment rate plus household income vs. national median.
Air quality index (EPA AQS data).
Share of residents 25+ with a bachelor's degree or higher.
Cost-of-living index of 84 (with 100 as the US baseline) — that's very affordable territory. With median rent at $917/mo and median household income at $49,853, housing takes about 22% of gross income — right inside the standard 30%-of-income guideline. Homes typically value around $121,100.
Full cost-of-living breakdown →Expect four-season weather — summers near 85°F, winters around 26°F. Rain (and snow, in some seasons) totals about 45 inches annually. You'll need a car for most things, though the central core is more walkable than the citywide score suggests. Crime runs notably high by national standards. As always, neighborhood-level data tells a more nuanced story than the citywide figure. AQI runs about 49 — a "good" reading.
Verdict by lifestyle profile — same data, different priorities.
Evansville is a tougher sell for families. The profile-weighted score is 44/100 — a D. Its standout dimension is affordability (93/100); the soft spot is safety (17/100).
Evansville is a tougher sell for retirees. The profile-weighted score is 49/100 — a D. Its standout dimension is affordability (93/100); the soft spot is safety (17/100).
Evansville is a tougher sell for remote workers. The profile-weighted score is 54/100 — a C-. Its standout dimension is affordability (93/100); the soft spot is safety (17/100).
Evansville is a tougher sell for young professionals. The profile-weighted score is 43/100 — a D. Its standout dimension is affordability (93/100); the soft spot is safety (17/100).
Our overall score for Evansville is 40/100 — a D, sitting at #801 in the national ranking. It's a weighted average across the seven UrbRank dimensions.
By the composite index, Evansville sits at 84 — very affordable, 16% below the national average. Median renter pays around $917 a month.
Evansville runs four-season on the weather. Summer's near 85°F, winter's near 26°F; 45 inches of precipitation annually.
Walk Score: 36/100. You'll need a car for most things, though the central core is more walkable than the citywide score suggests.
Roughly 116,906 people live here, with 22% college-educated (bachelor's or higher) among adults 25+ with a median age of 38.
Drop Evansville into the comparison tool with any other US city and you'll get housing costs, salaries, demographics, and quality-of-life data lined up side by side. Profile-specific leaderboards (families, retirees, remote workers, young professionals) are linked from the navigation.
Every US city is scored 0-100 on seven dimensions using public data from the US Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, FBI Crime Data Explorer, EPA Air Quality System, NOAA NCEI, and Walk Score. Each dimension is a percentile rank against every other city — so a score of 80 means the city is in the top 20% nationally on that dimension.
The overall score is a weighted average. Five lifestyle profiles — general, families, retirees, remote workers, young professionals — weight the dimensions differently to reflect what each cares about. Families get more weight on safety and schools; young professionals get more weight on jobs and walkability; retirees get more weight on climate.
Compare Evansville with other Indiana cities scored on UrbRank.
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