This guide maps the real 2026 cost of living in Edinburgh, based on UK government data from ONS (rent), Ofgem (energy), Edinburgh council (Band D), and regional transport authority figures. Everything is cited at the bottom.
How much does it cost to live in Edinburgh in 2026?
A single person renting a 1-bed flat in Edinburgh spends approximately £1,778/month on essentials (rent, council tax, energy, water, transport, groceries, broadband). The gross salary you need depends on how much budget headroom you want:Tight (75% of net on essentials, no savings buffer): £35,000/yearManageable (60% of net on essentials, modest savings): £45,500/yearComfortable (50% of net on essentials, full savings + buffer): £58,500/year
For a couple sharing a 2-bed flat, equivalent combined gross income is £55,500 tight / £74,000 manageable / £93,000 comfortable.
Scottish income tax applies (different bands from rUK above £28,850). Festival season pushes short-term rents up 20-40%.
Edinburgh sits in Lothian, Scotland (Scotland). The UK median full-time salary is £37,430 (ONS 2025); this guide compares every cost against both the national median and what local Edinburgh earners typically take home.
Monthly cost of living in Edinburgh — 2026 breakdown
Estimated single person in a 1-bedroom flat versus a couple in a 2-bedroom flat, in Edinburgh 2026. All figures based on UK government and regulator data (March 2026).
| Monthly essential | Single (1-bed) | Couple (2-bed) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent | £1,150 | £1,600 | ONS PIPR March 2026 |
| Council tax (Band D) | £109 (25% discount) | £146 | Edinburgh Council 2026/27 |
| Energy (gas + electricity) | £144 | £187 | Ofgem price cap Apr-Jun 2026 |
| Water | £37 | £56 | Regional water co. |
| Transport (monthly pass) | £65 | £130 | Local transport authority |
| Groceries | £245 | £416 | ONS Living Costs regional |
| Broadband | £28 | £28 | UK average entry-level |
| Total monthly essentials | £1,778 | £2,563 |
Excludes childcare, dining out, entertainment, gym, insurance, pension, savings. Most financial planners recommend essentials should be at most 50% of net income.
What salary do you need to live in Edinburgh?
There is no single "right" answer — it depends on how much of your take-home pay you are willing to spend on essentials. This table shows the gross salary required in Edinburgh for three common budgeting frameworks. All figures use UK 2026/27 tax rates (Scottish income tax bands applied).
| Budget tier | Essentials as % of net | Single (1-bed) | Couple (2-bed, combined) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tight — no savings, minimal buffer | 75% | £35,000 | £55,500 |
| Manageable — modest savings (standard UK guidance) | 60% | £45,500 | £74,000 |
| Comfortable — full savings, emergency buffer, lifestyle spend | 50% | £58,500 | £93,000 |
The local Edinburgh median gross salary is approximately £37,500 (ONS ASHE). This sits in the tight band for a single person renting a 1-bed flat. The UK median of £37,430 sits in the tight band.
Is £X enough to live in Edinburgh?
Based on the required-salary thresholds above, see our detailed guides for the salary bands relevant to Edinburgh:
- Is £45,000 a good salary in the UK? Full 2026 breakdown
- Is £50,000 a good salary in the UK? Full 2026 breakdown
- Is £40,000 a good salary in the UK? Full 2026 breakdown
See the complete UK salary guide for all 38 bands from £15k to £200k.
Tax note for Edinburgh residents
Scotland uses different income tax bands from England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Scottish rates run from 19% starter to 48% top rate. Most Scottish taxpayers earning above ~£28,850 pay slightly more income tax than the equivalent English taxpayer. Factor this into any cross-UK salary comparison.
Important: All figures are averages from UK government sources and aggregated regulators. Actual costs vary significantly within Edinburgh — premium central areas are typically 30-60% higher than these averages. This guide is general information, not personalised financial advice.
Frequently asked questions about the cost of living in Edinburgh
How much do I need to earn to live comfortably in Edinburgh?
There are three common benchmarks for a single person renting a 1-bedroom flat in Edinburgh: a tight budget (essentials at 75% of net) needs roughly £35,000/year gross; a manageable budget (60% of net, standard UK guidance) needs £45,500/year; a comfortable budget (50% of net with full savings buffer) needs £58,500/year. For a couple sharing a 2-bed, combined gross figures are £55,500/£74,000/£93,000 across the three tiers.
What is the average rent in Edinburgh in 2026?
According to ONS Price Index of Private Rents (March 2026), the average monthly rent in Edinburgh is £1,432. A 1-bedroom flat typically costs £1,150/month and a 2-bed around £1,600/month.
How much is council tax in Edinburgh?
Edinburgh council charges approximately £1,750 per year for a Band D property in 2026/27. Single-occupant households receive a 25% discount, bringing it to about £1,312/year.
Is Edinburgh cheaper than London?
Yes. The average rent in Edinburgh is £1,432, compared to London's £2,280 (ONS March 2026). Including other essentials, living in Edinburgh is typically 25-50% cheaper than London.
Do these figures include dining out or entertainment?
No. The monthly totals cover essential costs only: rent, council tax, energy, water, transport, groceries and broadband. Dining out, entertainment, gym, holidays, insurance, and savings are additional.
What's the median salary in Edinburgh?
According to ONS ASHE 2025 data, the median gross salary in the Edinburgh area is approximately £37,500/year. This is above the UK median of £37,430.