Cheapest Cities in Vermont

1 most affordable metro areas ranked by cost of living index

Where the Affordability Lives in Vermont

The most affordable metro inside Vermont is Burlington-South Burlington, VT with an overall Regional Price Parity of 100.9, close to the national baseline. Goods there index at 97.3, services at 125.5, and rents at 103.8 — and because rents carry the heaviest weight in the BEA formula, the low rent figure is typically what anchors a metro into the cheapest tier for its state.

Across the 1 lowest-cost Vermont metro area in this ranking, the average overall index is 100.9 and the average rent index is 103.8. 0 of these 1 metro sit below the U.S. national average, which tells you how much of a discount these areas really deliver relative to the country as a whole. The gap from Burlington-South Burlington, VT (100.9) up to Burlington-South Burlington, VT (100.9) inside this affordable list is 0.0 index points — a meaningful spread even among "cheapest" metros.

Translated into household budget, a nationally-priced $100,000 lifestyle in Burlington-South Burlington, VT costs about $100,949, leaving room for savings, housing quality upgrades, or lower work hours compared to high-cost coastal metros. Keep in mind that a low RPP does not automatically mean low local wages — local earning potential, commute distance, school quality, and property taxes all stack on top of the BEA price index. For anyone considering relocation inside Vermont, these cheapest metros are the right starting list, but always validate with rent tables and salary data specific to your occupation before committing.

# Metro Overall
1 Burlington-South Burlington, VT 100.9

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities Index where national average = 100