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Cost of living in Syria

Syria is 78% cheaper than the US, ranking #196 of 203 countries we cover for cost of living.

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

Cost of living · US = 100
22.4
Ranks #196 of 203 · 78% cheaper than the US
GDP / capita (PPP)
$4,772
GNI / capita (PPP)
$4,610
Inflation · YoY
13.4%
Population
24.7M
Capital
Damascus
Density
128 /km²
Urban
72%
Area
185.2K 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 Syria, food & groceries is the priciest category relative to the world (72), while communication is the most affordable (10).

Food & groceries 72
Restaurants & hotels 70
Transport 31
Health 20
Housing & utilities 16
Communication 10

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

Syria on the map

What your money is worth here

A $100,000 US lifestyle would cost roughly $22,500 in Syria.

Quality of life

68/100 · #122 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
68 / 100
Our transparent equal-weight composite
Life expectancy
73 yrs
World Bank · 2024 · source
Safety · homicide /100k
2.1
UNODC · 2010 · source
Infant mortality /1k
18
World Bank · 2024 · source
Internet users
34%
ITU · 2018 · source
Air quality · PM2.5
25 µg/m³
WHO · 2020 · source

About Syria

After World War I, France acquired a mandate over the northern portion of the former Ottoman Empire province of Syria. The French administered the area until granting it independence in 1946. The new country lacked political stability and experienced a series of military coups. Syria united with Egypt in 1958 to form the United Arab Republic. In 1961, the two entities separated, and the Syrian Arab Republic was reestablished. In the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Syria lost control of the Golan Heights region to Israel. During the 1990s, Syria and Israel held occasional, albeit unsuccessful, peace talks over its return. In 1970, Hafiz al-ASAD, a member of the socialist Ba'ath Party and the minority Alawi sect, seized power in a bloodless coup and brought political stability to the country. Following the death of al-ASAD, his son, Bashar al-ASAD, was approved as president by popular referendum in 2000. Syrian troops that were stationed in Lebanon since 1976 in an ostensible peacekeeping role were withdrawn in 2005. During the 2006 conflict between Israel and Hizballah, Syria placed its military forces on alert but did not intervene directly on behalf of its ally Hizballah. In 2007, Bashar al-ASAD's second term as president was again approved in a referendum.

Read the full background

In the wake of major uprisings elsewhere in the region, antigovernment protests broke out in the southern province of Dar'a in 2011. Protesters called for the legalization of political parties, the removal of corrupt local officials, and the repeal of the restrictive Emergency Law allowing arrests without charge. Demonstrations and violent unrest spread across Syria, and the government responded with concessions, but also with military force and detentions that led to extended clashes and eventually civil war. International pressure on the Syrian Government intensified after 2011, as the Arab League, the EU, Turkey, and the US expanded economic sanctions against the ASAD regime and those entities that supported it. In 2012, more than 130 countries recognized the Syrian National Coalition as the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people. In 2015, Russia launched a military intervention on behalf of the ASAD regime, and domestic and foreign-government-aligned forces recaptured swaths of territory from opposition forces. With foreign support, the regime continued to periodically regain opposition-held territory until 2020, when Turkish firepower halted a regime advance and forced a stalemate between regime and opposition forces. The government lacks territorial control over much of the northeastern part of the country, which the predominantly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) hold, and a smaller area dominated by Turkey. Since 2016, Turkey has conducted three large-scale military operations to capture territory along Syria's northern border. Some opposition forces organized under the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army and Turkish forces have maintained control of northwestern Syria along the Turkish border with the Afrin area of Aleppo Province since 2018. The violent extremist organization Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (formerly the Nusrah Front) emerged in 2017 as the predominant opposition force in Idlib Province, and still dominates an area also hosting Turkish forces. Negotiations have failed to produce a resolution to the conflict, and the UN estimated in 2022 that at least 306,000 people have died during the civil war. Approximately 6.7 million Syrians were internally displaced as of 2022, and 14.6 million people were in need of humanitarian assistance across the country. An additional 5.6 million Syrians were registered refugees in Turkey, Jordan, Iraq, Egypt, and North Africa. The conflict in Syria remains one of the two largest displacement crises worldwide (the other is the full-scale invasion of Ukraine).On 8 December 2024, Syrian Islamist rebels captured the capital city of Damascus and overthrew President Bashar al-ASAD. The former president and his family fled to Moscow, where they were granted political asylum. The al-ASAD regime had ruled Syria for over 50 years.

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

Frequently asked

Is Syria expensive to live in?

Syria is 78% cheaper than the US, ranking #196 of the 203 countries we track. Its most expensive category relative to the world is food & groceries; communication costs the least.

How much money do you need to live in Syria?

A lifestyle that costs $100,000 in the United States would cost roughly $22,500 in Syria, going by overall price levels. The salary translator turns your own figure into a local equivalent.

Is Syria cheaper than the United States?

Yes. Its overall price level is 22.4, against 100 for the United States.

What is the quality of life in Syria?

Syria scores 68 out of 100 on our quality-of-life index (#122 of 198), a composite of life expectancy, safety, health, and connectivity, with life expectancy around 73 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
22.4
GDP per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2022 · source
$4,772
GNI per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2022 · source
$4,610
Inflation (annual %)
World Bank · 2019 · source
13.4%
Population
World Bank · 2024 · source
24.7M
Population density
World Bank · 2023 · source
128 /km²
Urban population
World Bank · 2024 · source
72%
Surface area
World Bank · 2023 · source
185.2K km²

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