Home Β· Learn Β· Cheapest US States to Live In (Cost of Living)

10 cheapest US states to live in right now (2026)

Ranked by 2026 composite cost-of-living index against a national baseline of 100. Housing, groceries, utilities, and state tax breakdowns for each of the ten cheapest states.

Cost of living in the US is not evenly distributed. The composite index runs from about 84 in Mississippi to about 189 in Hawaii, meaning the same paycheck stretches roughly twice as far in Jackson as it does in Honolulu. Housing drives most of the gap, but grocery prices, utility rates, and state tax structure each shift the ranking. This guide lists the ten cheapest states for 2026, with median home prices, average rent, and the single biggest factor that lands each state on the list.

The 10 cheapest states ranked by cost-of-living index

The composite index averages housing, groceries, utilities, transportation, healthcare, and miscellaneous goods against a national baseline of 100. Anything under 90 counts as clearly cheaper than average. Every state on this list is under 92.

RankStateIndexMedian home priceCapital
1Mississippi84.6$175,000Jackson
2Oklahoma86.1$205,000Oklahoma City
3Kansas86.6$215,000Topeka
4Alabama87.4$225,000Montgomery
5West Virginia87.7$160,000Charleston
6Arkansas88.4$195,000Little Rock
7Tennessee89.0$285,000Nashville
8Missouri89.1$235,000Jefferson City
9Iowa89.9$215,000Des Moines
10Indiana90.6$225,000Indianapolis

What each state gets right on affordability

Nine of the ten cheapest states are in the South or the Midwest. Real estate is the common thread, but each state has its own reason for staying cheap.

Housing, groceries, and taxes broken down

Cost of living is really three separate calculations stapled together. Housing swings the widest, groceries and utilities move together, and state tax structure decides who actually keeps the savings.

Housing

Five of the ten cheapest states have median home prices under $220,000. West Virginia, Mississippi, and Arkansas are the only states in the country where the statewide median stays under $200,000. Rent tells the same story: two-bedroom apartments in Jackson, Little Rock, and Charleston list in the $850 to $1,000 range, against a US median above $1,600.

Groceries and utilities

Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri form a tight band of low grocery prices, running 6 to 9 percent under the national average. Utility costs in the same three states are held down by cheap natural gas and coal-heavy electricity grids. Alabama and Mississippi have higher utility bills in summer because of air-conditioning load, which partly offsets their housing advantage.

State taxes

Tennessee has no income tax, period. Mississippi's top rate is 4.4 percent and the state exempts most retirement income. Alabama and Missouri both allow federal tax deductions on state returns, which lowers the effective rate. Kansas and Iowa are middle-of-the-pack on income tax but keep property taxes below the national average.

Cheap states with no income tax

Nine US states levy no personal wage income tax. Only two of them, Tennessee and Texas, are broadly affordable. The other seven either sit at national-average cost of living (South Dakota, Wyoming) or well above it (Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, Washington, Alaska).

For renters and remote workers, Tennessee is the strongest combination of cheap housing and no income tax. For homeowners planning to stay put, Mississippi and Alabama usually beat Texas once property taxes are included.

Learn state geography by playing

Statedoku uses clues like "cheapest state," "no income tax," and "under $200,000 median home" as puzzle constraints. Play the daily puzzle and the affordability map sticks.

Today's puzzle β†’

Related guides