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Oceania · Sydney

Cost of living in Australia

Australia is 9% cheaper than the US, ranking #17 of 203 countries we cover for cost of living. The local currency is AUD (A$).

World Bank data through 2024 · last reviewed 2026-06.

Cost of living · US = 100
90.9
Ranks #17 of 203 · 9% cheaper than the US
GDP / capita (PPP)
$72,111
GNI / capita (PPP)
$69,600
Inflation · YoY
3.2%
Population
27.2M
Capital
Canberra
Density
3 /km²
Urban
88%
Area
7.7M km²

What drives the cost here

Price levels by category, where the world average = 100. Above 100 is pricier than the global norm; below it is cheaper.

In Australia, housing & utilities is the priciest category relative to the world (257), while communication is the most affordable (115).

Housing & utilities 257
Health 194
Restaurants & hotels 187
Food & groceries 148
Transport 136
Communication 115

Category price levels: World Bank ICP 2021 (world average = 100) · source

Australia on the map

What your money is worth here

A $100,000 US lifestyle would cost roughly $91,000 in Australia.

Quality of life

96/100 · #19 of 198

Beyond cost — health, safety, and connectivity. The score is a transparent, equal-weight composite of the verified metrics below (see methodology).

Quality-of-life score
96 / 100
Our transparent equal-weight composite
Life expectancy
83 yrs
World Bank · 2024 · source
Safety · homicide /100k
0.9
UNODC · 2023 · source
Infant mortality /1k
3
World Bank · 2024 · source
Internet users
96%
ITU · 2024 · source
Air quality · PM2.5
8 µg/m³
WHO · 2020 · source

About Australia

Aboriginal Australians arrived on the continent at least 60,000 years ago and developed complex hunter-gatherer societies and oral histories. Dutch navigators led by Abel TASMAN were the first Europeans to land in Australia in 1606, and they mapped the western and northern coasts. They named the continent New Holland but made no attempts to permanently settle it. In 1770, Englishman James COOK sailed to the east coast of Australia, named it New South Wales, and claimed it for Great Britain. In 1788 and 1825 respectively, Great Britain established New South Wales and then Tasmania as penal colonies. Great Britain and Ireland sent more than 150,000 convicts to Australia before ending the practice in 1868. As Europeans began settling areas away from the coasts, they came into more direct contact with Aboriginal Australians. Europeans also cleared land for agriculture, impacting Aboriginal Australians’ ways of life. These issues, along with disease and a policy in the 1900s that forcefully removed Aboriginal children from their parents, reduced the Aboriginal Australian population from more than 700,000 pre-European contact to a low of 74,000 in 1933.Four additional colonies were established in Australia in the mid-1800s: Western Australia (1829), South Australia (1836), Victoria (1851), and Queensland (1859). Gold rushes beginning in the 1850s brought thousands of new immigrants to New South Wales and Victoria, helping to reorient Australia away from its penal colony roots. In the second half of the 1800s, the colonies were all gradually granted self-government, and in 1901, they federated and became the Commonwealth of Australia. Australia contributed more than 400,000 troops to Allied efforts during World War I, and Australian troops played a large role in the defeat of Japanese troops in the Pacific in World War II. Australia severed most constitutional links with the UK in 1942 but remained part of the British Commonwealth. Australia’s post-war economy boomed and by the 1970s, racial policies that prevented most non-Whites from immigrating to Australia were removed, greatly increasing Asian immigration to the country. In recent decades, Australia has become an internationally competitive, advanced market economy due in large part to economic reforms adopted in the 1980s and its proximity to East and Southeast Asia.

Read the full background

In the early 2000s, Australian politics became unstable with frequent attempts to oust party leaders, including five changes of prime minister between 2010 and 2018. As a result, both major parties instituted rules to make it harder to remove a party leader.

Background from the CIA World Factbook (public domain), archived 2026-06-03.

Frequently asked

Is Australia expensive to live in?

Australia is 9% cheaper than the US, ranking #17 of the 203 countries we track. Its most expensive category relative to the world is housing & utilities; communication costs the least.

How much money do you need to live in Australia?

A lifestyle that costs $100,000 in the United States would cost roughly $91,000 in Australia, going by overall price levels. The salary translator turns your own figure into a local equivalent.

Is Australia cheaper than the United States?

Yes. Its overall price level is 90.9, against 100 for the United States.

What is the quality of life in Australia?

Australia scores 96 out of 100 on our quality-of-life index (#19 of 198), a composite of life expectancy, safety, health, and connectivity, with life expectancy around 83 years.

Every number, sourced.

We cite the exact source and year for each figure. Derived values are computed at build time, never hand-entered.

Price level index (US = 100)
Derived: nominal ÷ PPP GDP per capita, indexed to the US
90.9
GDP per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$72,111
GNI per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$69,600
Inflation (annual %)
World Bank · 2024 · source
3.2%
Population
World Bank · 2024 · source
27.2M
Population density
World Bank · 2023 · source
3 /km²
Urban population
World Bank · 2024 · source
88%
Surface area
World Bank · 2023 · source
7.7M km²

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