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Alessandro Binda
Alessandro Binda

Posted on • Originally published at relomap.app

Numbeo Data vs Reality: Real Cost of Living in 10 Cities

Verified data from Numbeo, Expatistan, and official sources. Updated May 2026.


Everyone talks about "moving abroad to save money." But how much do you actually save? I built ReloMap — a free platform that compares verified cost-of-living data for 208 cities — and the numbers surprised me.

Here's what a comfortable lifestyle (1BR apartment, eating out twice a week, gym, transport) actually costs in Europe's most popular expat cities.

The Full Ranking

City Monthly Budget Rent 1BR Meal Out Safety
Tbilisi, Georgia €1,100 €450 €5 65/100
Sofia, Bulgaria €1,200 €468 €6 65/100
Bucharest, Romania €1,300 €550 €7 55/100
Budapest, Hungary €1,400 €650 €8 60/100
Prague, Czech Republic €1,600 €900 €9 76/100
Lisbon, Portugal €2,100 €1,345 €14 67/100
Valencia, Spain €1,800 €522 €14 80/100
Malaga, Spain €1,900 €1,300 €12 68/100
Berlin, Germany €2,300 €1,314 €12 55/100
Barcelona, Spain €2,400 €1,437 €15 48/100
Madrid, Spain €2,200 €1,200 €14 52/100
Porto, Portugal €1,900 €1,105 €12 66/100
Amsterdam, Netherlands €3,100 €1,850 €18 52/100
Paris, France €2,800 €1,339 €16 42/100

5 Things That Surprised Me

1. Valencia is criminally underrated. €522/month rent for a 1BR in a city with beaches, 300 sunny days, and a safety score of 80/100. It's cheaper than Lisbon but with better weather and higher safety.

2. Lisbon is no longer "cheap." At €1,345/month rent, Lisbon is approaching Barcelona prices. The NHR tax regime (20% flat rate) is still the main draw, but the cost advantage over Western Europe is shrinking fast.

3. Tbilisi is the best-kept secret. €450/month rent, 1-year visa-free for most nationalities, 1% flat tax for small businesses. The catch? Language barrier is real, winters are cold, and the food scene — while excellent — gets repetitive.

4. Safety scores vary wildly. Barcelona scores 48/100 on safety (pickpocketing is rampant), while Prague scores 76/100 and Valencia 80/100. For families, this matters more than rent.

5. The "frugal nomad" lifestyle is real. You can genuinely live on €800/month in Tbilisi or Sofia. Not luxuriously, but comfortably — cooking at home, public transport, local gym. In Amsterdam, that wouldn't cover rent.

The Tax Factor Nobody Talks About

A freelancer earning €60,000/year pays:

  • Italy: €23,400 in taxes (39%)
  • Spain (Beckham Law): €14,400 (24%)
  • Portugal (NHR): €12,000 (20%)
  • Georgia: €600 (1% for small business)
  • UAE: €0 (0%)

The tax savings alone can be worth €10,000-20,000/year — more than the difference in rent between most cities.

I built a free tax calculator that compares your tax burden between any two countries, including special regimes.

How I Built This

I scraped cost-of-living data from multiple sources (Numbeo, Expatistan, Livingcost.org), cross-referenced them, and built a platform that updates monthly. All data is verified — 0% AI-generated prices.

The platform is free: relomap.app. You can compare any cities side-by-side, read in-depth guides for each destination, and calculate your tax burden.

If you're considering a move, the full comparison of all 208 cities is the best starting point.


Data sources: ReloMap verified database (208 cities, May 2026), Numbeo, Expatistan. Full dataset available at relomap.app/llms-full.txt.

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