Most Expensive Cities in Vermont
1 metro areas ranked by overall cost of living index
Where the Premium Lives in Vermont
The priciest metro in Vermont is Burlington-South Burlington, VT with a Regional Price Parity of 100.9, 0.9% above the U.S. national average of 100. Its category mix tells the story: goods at 97.3, services at 125.5, and rents at 103.8. The rent line is almost always the decisive input in high-cost metros, because the BEA weights housing heavily and urban land prices compound through the services sector as well.
Across the top 1 most expensive metro area in Vermont, the average overall index sits at 100.9 and the average rent index at 103.8. 1 of these 1 metro clear the national average outright, which tells you how much of the state's overall cost signal is being driven by these urban anchors. The spread from Burlington-South Burlington, VT (100.9) down to Burlington-South Burlington, VT (100.9) inside this top list is 0.0 index points, a measurable gap even among the state's priciest markets.
For household budgeting, a $100,000 nationally-benchmarked lifestyle in Burlington-South Burlington, VT requires about $100,949 to reproduce, which compresses discretionary income and pushes savings rates down compared to cheaper alternatives. That said, premium metros typically pair their higher costs with deeper labor markets and higher nominal wages, so the real question for anyone evaluating these areas is whether local salary offers close the gap. Before acting on this ranking, layer in salary data for your occupation, HUD Fair Market Rent figures, and state tax treatment, the BEA index is the baseline, not the full answer.
| # | Metro | Overall |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Burlington-South Burlington, VT | 100.9 |
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Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities Bureau of Economic Analysis, Regional Price Parities Index where national average = 100
Read our methodology - how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.