Yes, Madrid is meaningfully cheaper than the US average: $2,725 against $3,525, a gap of $800 a month, or about 23 percent. The comparison sharpens or fades depending on the US baseline. Versus New York ($5,775), Los Angeles ($5,050), or San Francisco, Madrid is roughly half the monthly cost. Versus a mid-tier US metro (Atlanta, Denver, Austin at $3,200 to $3,600), the gap is closer to $500 to $900. Versus low-cost states (Mississippi $3,025, Alabama $3,100), Madrid edges ahead on cheapness, mostly through housing and dining. The composition matters. Spanish groceries are 30 to 40 percent cheaper than US averages, dining out is dramatically cheaper, and public healthcare access (through social security contributions or private equivalents) eliminates the major US healthcare line. Housing in central Madrid is closer to a US mid-tier metro than a Tier 1 city. For the full breakdown, see our Madrid cost of living page.
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Is Madrid cheaper than the USA?
City Europe
Updated July 2026