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Cost of Living Calculator

Plan your weekly budget and identify surplus or deficit across all expense categories.

Budget PlannerAU Living Costs

About this tool

Plan your weekly budget and identify surplus or deficit across all expense categories. MyCalcTools calculators are designed for quick everyday estimates with clear inputs, instant results and no account required. Results are provided for general information and planning, not as professional financial, medical, legal or trade advice.

How to use it

  1. Enter the values requested in the calculator fields.
  2. Choose the option that best matches your situation, unit or goal.
  3. Press the calculate button and review the result summary.
  4. Adjust your inputs to compare different scenarios.

Common use cases

  • Checking a quick estimate before making a decision.
  • Comparing two or more everyday scenarios side by side.
  • Planning budgets, meals, projects, dates or personal routines.
  • Double-checking manual calculations with a simple online reference.

About the Cost of Living Calculator

The cost of living calculator helps you estimate your total monthly and annual expenses across major spending categories — housing, food, transport, utilities, healthcare, and discretionary spending. It gives you a clearer picture of how much you actually need to earn to cover your lifestyle, and identifies categories where you may be able to reduce spending.

How to Use It

  1. Enter your monthly expenditure for each category (or your best estimate).
  2. Review the total monthly cost of living and annual figure.
  3. Compare your total to your take-home income to see how much surplus or deficit you have each month.
  4. Use the category breakdown to identify where your spending is highest relative to income.

Cost of Living in Australian Cities

The cost of living varies significantly between Australian cities and regions. Sydney and Melbourne consistently rank among the most expensive cities in the Asia-Pacific region, driven largely by housing costs. Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide have lower housing costs on average, though they have converged somewhat as interstate migration has increased demand. When comparing costs between cities, housing is almost always the dominant variable — food, utilities, and transport costs are more similar across capital cities than rent or mortgage repayments. If you are considering relocating for work, the salary difference between cities should be weighed against the full cost-of-living gap, not just rent alone.

A single person renting in a capital city typically needs $3,500–$5,000 per month in after-tax income to cover rent, food, transport, utilities, insurance, and some discretionary spending comfortably. Costs are lower in regional areas — $2,500–$3,500 per month is more typical outside major cities. These are rough guides; your actual costs depend on lifestyle, suburb, transport choices, and spending habits.