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Africa · Kigali

Cost of living in Rwanda

Rwanda is 73% cheaper than the US, ranking #183 of 203 countries we cover for cost of living.

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

Cost of living · US = 100
27.3
Ranks #183 of 203 · 73% cheaper than the US
GDP / capita (PPP)
$3,711
GNI / capita (PPP)
$3,620
Inflation · YoY
1.8%
Population
14.3M
Capital
Kigali
Density
566 /km²
Urban
30%
Area
26.3K 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 Rwanda, communication is the priciest category relative to the world (72), while health is the most affordable (34).

Communication 72
Transport 68
Food & groceries 62
Restaurants & hotels 51
Housing & utilities 34
Health 34

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

Rwanda on the map

What your money is worth here

A $100,000 US lifestyle would cost roughly $27,500 in Rwanda.

Quality of life

59/100 · #144 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
59 / 100
Our transparent equal-weight composite
Life expectancy
68 yrs
World Bank · 2024 · source
Safety · homicide /100k
3.6
UNODC · 2020 · source
Infant mortality /1k
29
World Bank · 2024 · source
Internet users
32%
ITU · 2024 · source
Air quality · PM2.5
31 µg/m³
WHO · 2020 · source

About Rwanda

Rwanda -- a small and centralized country dominated by rugged hills and fertile volcanic soil -- has exerted disproportionate influence over the African Great Lakes region for centuries. A Rwandan kingdom increasingly dominated the region from the mid-18th century onward, with the Tutsi monarchs gradually extending the power of the royal court into peripheral areas and expanding their borders through military conquest. While the current ethnic labels Hutu and Tutsi predate colonial rule, their flexibility and importance have varied significantly over time and often manifested more as a hierarchical class distinction than an ethnic or cultural distinction. The majority Hutu and minority Tutsi have long shared a common language and culture, and intermarriage was frequent. The Rwandan royal court centered on the Tutsi king (mwami), who relied on an extensive network of political, cultural, and economic relationships. Social categories became more rigid during the reign of RWABUGIRI (1860-1895), who focused on aggressive expansion and solidifying Rwanda’s bureaucratic structures. German colonial conquest began in the late 1890s, but the territory was ceded to Belgian forces in 1916 during World War I. Both European nations quickly realized the benefits of ruling through the already centralized Rwandan Tutsi kingdom. Colonial rule reinforced existing trends toward autocratic and exclusionary rule, leading to the elimination of traditional positions of authority for Hutus. Belgian administrators significantly increased requirements for communal labor and instituted harsh taxes, which fed the population's frustration. Changing political attitudes in Belgium contributed to colonial and Catholic officials shifting their support from Tutsi to Hutu leaders in the years leading up to independence.

Read the full background

Simmering resentment of minority rule exploded in 1959, three years before independence from Belgium, when Hutus overthrew the Tutsi king. Thousands of Tutsis were killed over the next several years, and some 150,000 were driven into exile in neighboring countries. Army Chief of Staff Juvenal HABYARIMANA seized power in a coup in 1973 and ruled Rwanda as a single-party state for two decades. HABYARIMANA increasingly discriminated against Tutsis, and extremist Hutu factions gained prominence after multiple parties were introduced in the early 1990s. The children of Tutsi exiles later formed a rebel group, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) and began a civil war in 1990. The civil war exacerbated ethnic tensions and culminated in the shooting down of HABYARIMANA’s private jet in 1994. The event sparked a state-orchestrated genocide in which Rwandans killed more than 800,000 of their fellow citizens, including approximately three-quarters of the Tutsi population. The genocide ended later the same year when the predominantly Tutsi RPF, operating out of Uganda and northern Rwanda, defeated the national army and Hutu militias and established an RPF-led government of national unity. Rwanda held its first local elections in 1999 and its first post-genocide presidential and legislative elections in 2003, formalizing President Paul KAGAME’s de facto role as head of government. KAGAME was formally elected in 2010, and again in 2017 after changing the constitution to allow him to run for a third term.

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

Frequently asked

Is Rwanda expensive to live in?

Rwanda is 73% cheaper than the US, ranking #183 of the 203 countries we track. Its most expensive category relative to the world is communication; health costs the least.

How much money do you need to live in Rwanda?

A lifestyle that costs $100,000 in the United States would cost roughly $27,500 in Rwanda, going by overall price levels. The salary translator turns your own figure into a local equivalent.

Is Rwanda cheaper than the United States?

Yes. Its overall price level is 27.3, against 100 for the United States.

What is the quality of life in Rwanda?

Rwanda scores 59 out of 100 on our quality-of-life index (#144 of 198), a composite of life expectancy, safety, health, and connectivity, with life expectancy around 68 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
27.3
GDP per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$3,711
GNI per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$3,620
Inflation (annual %)
World Bank · 2024 · source
1.8%
Population
World Bank · 2024 · source
14.3M
Population density
World Bank · 2023 · source
566 /km²
Urban population
World Bank · 2024 · source
30%
Surface area
World Bank · 2023 · source
26.3K km²

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