In Budapest, everyday life in the eastern bloc is the seventh most expensive
We seem to have overtaken Moscow, for example, but several cities in Slovakia and the Czech Republic are ahead of us.
Numbeo’s publication on Central and Eastern Europe deals with the daily cost of living in cities (milk, food, restaurants, travel, shopping, etc.) on this pride). From the list of 49 cities, it quickly becomes clear that Budapest is not particularly bad at the moment, as several nearby cities are ahead of us:
the Hungarian capital has become the seventh most expensive in the region, with huge Czech rule on the list.
The most dramatic, perhaps unsurprisingly, is Prague, but the surprise is that Bratislava ran into second place, followed by Brno, followed by Alamo, Košice, Ostrava.
Warsaw reached eighth place, followed by Gdyna of Poland, and Sofia of Bulgaria was in tenth place.
Interestingly, Moscow, which has long been among the most expensive cities in the world, is already the eleventh on this list due to the soaring Russian economy.
There is also a Hungarian city, specifically Pécs, which became the fifteenth, which means that living there is a bit more expensive than in Bucharest, but Szeged and Debrecen also ran into the middle.
Unsurprisingly, the second half of the list is occupied by fewer tourist cities in Ukraine and Russia, but also in the capital of Moldova, Chisinau.
The full list is available by clicking here.
Of course, it is worth telling what were the exact aspects: list rankings are taken from percentages, 10 percent here means New York,
Budapest Budapest actually consumes 46 percent of the cost of living there.
Based on these, renting an apartment in Budapest is a 16 percent of New York’s money, which is less than the terribly expensive Prague (26), but Moscow is where it is not surprising, where 28 percent of New York’s rentals live.
FEATURED IMAGE: Brendan Park / Pixabay