Ireland is the EU's second most expensive country — consumer prices ran 36% above the EU average in 2025, and housing costs nearly double it. Nobody moves here to save money. Here's what things actually cost, from official statistics, so you can budget like an adult.
Last verified: 8 July 2026 · €1 = $1.14| Area | Average rent (Q4 2025, RTB) | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| National — new tenancies | €1,755/mo | $2,000 |
| National — existing tenancies | €1,503/mo | $1,710 |
| Dublin — new tenancies | ≈ €2,200/mo | $2,510 |
| Cork City | ≈ €1,413/mo | $1,610 |
| Galway City | ≈ €1,409/mo | $1,610 |
Source: RTB Rent Index, Q4 2025 (published May 2026). Since 1 March 2026, in-tenancy rent increases are capped nationally at 2% a year or inflation, whichever is lower — see the Housing guide for the full reform.
Putting the verified pieces together — rent from the RTB data, private health cover for two, plus a realistic allowance for groceries, utilities, transport, and life:
| Scenario (couple, renting) | Monthly total | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| Regional city (Cork, Galway, Limerick) | ~€3,000–3,600 | $3,420–4,100 |
| Dublin | ~€3,800–4,500 | $4,330–5,130 |
These are planning ranges built from the line items above, not statistics — spend patterns vary, and they exclude a car purchase, travel, and one-off setup costs. Note how they sit against the Stamp 0 requirement of €100,000/year for a couple: the income bar is set far above what living here actually costs. That's deliberate.
The same €3,500/month, spent three ways — with the trade-offs spelled out.
Groceries, utilities, insurance, dining — compared against typical US metro costs.
Deposits, setup fees, a car, furniture — the one-off costs nobody budgets for.