Which City is More Expensive: NY or LA?

by , September 17, 2012 — 5 Comments
Which is More Expensive? LA vs. NYC

This article is from our friends at LearnVest, a leading site for women and their money.

 

Where do you call home—and how much does it cost you to live there?

Unless you’ve made a big move from a city with one cost of living to another with a very different one, you might take things like how much you pay in rent, pay for your groceries each week, or budget for fall clothes as a given.

I did, too: Until I traded one coast for another, relocating from New York City to Los Angeles. Aside from the weather, and the little cultural differences (subways vs. convertibles, avocados vs. bagels, Real Housewives of New York vs. Beverly Hills), it was also a financial wake-up call about just how much location, location, location affects your bottom line.

My research is derived from the five years I spent living in Manhattan before moving to LA two years ago. I have long been a budget-keeper (budget following is another story), so I was able to watch my tally of things like weekly food expenses and monthly electric bills change as I shifted from one city to the other.

Here, broken out by the major spending categories of a single, 28-year-old female, are my findings. And yes I know, this tally would look very different if I were, say, the head of a family of four, but right now, as a newly cohabitating woman, here’s an honest look at what I spent while living on each coast.

 

Housing Winner: LA by a Long Shot

I was fortunate to live in a rent-stabilized apartment in New York’s West Village, so my rent was only $1,000 per month. I know: If you live in a part of the country with reasonable housing costs, your jaw just dropped, but trust me, that was incredibly low for Manhattan. That said, my $1,000 afforded me a closet-sized apartment on the 4th floor of a non-elevator building.

My kitchen, living room, and dining room were the same 10×10 foot space (kitchdineliveroom?). When I moved to LA, I spent the exact same $1,000, but here that got me a 12×14 foot bedroom in a massive house with a backyard. Of note: my LA house was also in an equally desirable neighborhood as my NYC apartment.

Dollar for dollar, the spending is the same, but the value is incomparable. There were much cheaper housing options available in LA. I chose to live in a big house with friends, but I could have lived in a larger apartment building with a roommate for $800 a month. You’d have to live in the depths of Brooklyn to pay that little in New York.

 

Transportation Winner: New York, No Contest

This one easily goes to Manhattan. As a New Yorker, I walked to work every single day for zero dollars. Even if I had commuted, I would have taken the subway for $104 per month, unlimited.

Meanwhile, in LA, my current car payment is $205 per month (which is very low compared to most), plus car insurance of $117. We’re already at $322 per month, and I haven’t even factored in the astronomical price of gas. I fill up my Jetta about two and a half times per month. With gas at $4.35 a gallon, that costs me around $56 a tank, or an extra $120 a month in gas!

 

Food and Drink Winner: It’s a Draw

There are multiple factors to consider. First you’ve got groceries. Here, LA wins by a mile. My box of Special K used to cost me $5.15 in Manhattan. Today that same box costs me $3.95. Same applies to things like liquor ($9.99 for a six pack of Corona vs. $6.99) and cleaning supplies ($5.99 for a bottle of Tide in New York vs. $4.99 in LA).

But NYC wins at fast food. Yes, there are fantastic, healthy options here in LA that won’t break the bank, but no city in the world offers the quantity, variety, and low prices of grab-and-go food than Manhattan. If I want Thai take-out here in LA, I go to the one place in my neighborhood that offers that cuisine. If I wanted Thai take-out in New York, I walked out my front door, picked a direction, and had three amazing options within a block.

Then we have the cost of dining out: Here, in my opinion, LA is the winner. I think this has something to do with the amount of alcohol consumed with a meal in New York versus a meal in LA (because people drive!). I also have a feeling there is simply more availability of fresh food in LA, so mid-level restaurants can offer incredible meals whereas only the more established and expensive restaurants in New York can do the same.

 

Clothing Winner: LA Every Time

Finally, the most important category in the life of any single woman: her clothing budget.

Bottom line: I now have one wardrobe versus two. Yes, we wear boots and jeans in the winter in LA, and I do keep two warm coats for cold nights, but my wardrobe has been cut in half since I moved to Southern California. Plus, this is a city of minimalism when it comes to fashion, so the crazy, multi-piece outfits of Manhattan nights out have been ditched in favor of flowy tops and casual dresses. The same applies to shoes. In New York I would wear my shoes ragged after one season of the cobblestone streets of the Meatpacking District. Here I drive, so it’s no contest.

Granted, flip flops are another issue, but they’re just a tad cheaper than a new pair of knee-high leather boots, if you know what I mean.

 

Conclusion: Overall, LA Wins

That’s a different story than calling LA “cheaper” than New York. They’re both expensive cities with a higher cost of living than most other places in the US, but what you can get for your money on the West Coast is simply more than the East Coast alternative.

To truly make that a reality you need to keep your car costs down and live outside the most popular neighborhoods in town (sorry, West Hollywood and Santa Monica), but you can live an incredibly comfortable life with an herb garden, a lemon tree, and an insanely low electric bill (you barely need the heat or the AC!) if you play your cards right.

 

Want to play compare and contrast? Unless you call one or another coast home, I bet this will be a fun game for you. I dare you to tell me how much you spend on rent, food and clothing.

 

More from LearnVest

 

Photo of New York skyline courtesy of Shutterstock.

About the Author

LearnVest empowers people to live their richest lives, with daily newsletters packed with tips and stories on managing your money and boosting your career, a budgeting center for keeping track of your expenses and income, and affordable, personalized financial plans from a team of certified financial planners.

5 comments
r
r

I so agree with you in many aspects, specially in what refers to social life, in L.A. is so hard to make and keep friends, here everybody is too busy driving. You're always 5 miles away from nowhere, either a freeway or a parking lot. Public transportation does suck here, you have to plan your day way ahead, and yes that means you will only run one errand. Compared to NY where you have everything walking distance. Which also makes it a much more interesting place. But I believe your numbers are a little inflated. 1000 dollars in car expanses? Maybe if you drive a gas guzzler 100 miles a day. 1000 dollars in rent in Koreantown, that sure should cover your own spot, even in desirable Weho, my friends have found places in the 1300 area. That compared to say the desirable lower half of Manhattan would be virtually impossible, those would be with a roommate kind of price, and even then a deal. Sure you can get rent for 1000 in Sunset park Brooklyn, but that's like comparing to a shitty neighborhood in San Fernando Valley. In general rent will be 3/4 to half of what you pay in NY, for a whole lot better deal(space, amenities, quality of the apartment and neighborhood), so it's a trade off. The article is very accurate, and it makes a very good comparison from what I experienced living in NY for 7 years and almost 4 here in LA.

J
J

I’ve lived in 6 different cities post-college, including NYC, London, Boston and LA. I know an expensive cost of living well, and I can honestly say, between NYC and LA, LA is more expensive, hands down.

Like the author, I made the cross-country move to LA after living in NYC for yefivears. I have been in LA for two years since.

Back in NYC, I spent $950 for a roommate share in a HUGE loft in Bushwick (separate rooms!); $1200 for a two-bedroom in Sunset Park; $850 for a roommate share in Washington Heights (Hudson Heights area specifically); $1200 for a studio in Alphabet City. I earned $55K at my highest salary in NYC. I moved to LA for a job that paid $60K. I settled on a studio in Koreatown, south of Wilshire mind you, and paid $950/month. Granted, space was larger than my studio in the East Village, but not by much. I chose Koreatown for one of the few proximities in LA to public transportation.

After a year, I realized I needed to purchase a car; public transportation wasn’t cutting it. I could run one errand/day, not “errands”. I could not go to the gym without a roundtrip 2-hour bus commute. I l left home at 5am to get to my job at 8am, and I got back home from work at 10pm. Forget meeting friends.

So, now with a $300 car payment/month, $142 car insurance and gas (currently creeping to $5/gallon), I spend almost $1K/month in transportation, and I have moved to a roommate situation,in North Hollywood and pay $1K for my share. I moved because parking in congested Koreatown cost an additional $100/month.

The difference between LA and NYC is huge. Yes, as the author notes, you get more space. But do you get bang for your buck? No. Your $1K still gets you a roommate. And yes, as the author notes, you can cut rental costs significantly by moving to less popular neighborhoods. But that’s the problem: LA sprawl does not allow for a quality lifestyle, unless you live in a central, relatively desirable neighborhood. (For anyone who cares to read this and does not know LA, North Hollywood is alright. And alright only).

You can live in Sunset Park in Brooklyn and take the D train into the city in no time. You cannot live in an outlying area of LA without doubling a commute (=more gas money). Your social life is out the window. I was extremely active and out in NYC. Not so much in LA. Unless you live in a popular neighborhood that has stuff going on, you’ll be driving (=more gas money), or you’ll be cabbing it (=$100 one way from Venice to North Hollywood).

Sales tax is more expensive in LA, and they tax EVERYTHING. Dining out and social life is cost comparable to NYC. Grocery store…a pack of hotdogs is $7. Admittedly, I didn’t grocery shop in NYC, but I had options at the local stores/delis that worked for a $5 daily food budget.

Hands down, LA is more expensive. It is also boring. Unless you have the cash to live in the popular neighborhood or take a cab, you’ll be sitting at home in a concrete jungle night after night, with nowhere to walk to except for 7-eleven or Jiffy Lube. They say LA is superficial. After moving here, however, I realize, it’s less superficial in the predictable “plastic” sense but, rather, superficial because every single thing you do, everything you want to do requires cash-ola. And lots of it. NYC requires grit and a toothbrush, and that’s it.

Jamie
Jamie

I'd like to see SF vs NYC!

Kelsey
Kelsey

I thought the same thing!

Rachel
Rachel

Haha, my jaw dropped when I saw $1,000, because I was like, "that's so cheap!" Yay New York, lol.