Eggs 6
Cost of living, rent, and safety data — Population 1,413,982 • 1 community reports
Data last updated
City Score
Best for: Healthcare · Room to grow: Roads & Traffic
Eggs 6
Common questions about living in Raleigh, NC
Crime rates in Raleigh are a touch above the national midpoint. The violent crime index comes in at 107 and property crime at 128, where 100 represents the U.S. average. That's not alarming, but it's enough that you should spend real time researching specific neighborhoods rather than assuming everywhere is equally fine. Talk to people who live there, walk the streets at different hours, and check the local police department's crime map. FBI UCR data.
By most measures, yes. The median rent of $1,468/month against a median household income of $82,424/year works out to a 21.4% rent-to-income ratio. Financial planners generally want that number under 30%, so Raleigh clears the bar with room to spare. You'll have breathing space for savings, car payments, and the occasional splurge. Numbers from Census ACS 2023.
The average worker in Raleigh spends about 18 minutes getting to the office. Driving solo is the default (65.1%), with 23.4% working remotely and 1.3% on public transit. It's a fairly typical commute — not a selling point, not a dealbreaker.
Not particularly. The climate risk score is 30/100, which puts Raleigh in the low-risk tier. Hurricane, Heat Wave, and Flood are the most relevant hazards, but none of them are frequent concerns. Standard insurance should have you covered. It's one less thing to worry about if you're comparing this city to higher-risk metros along the coast or in tornado alley. Data from FEMA disaster declarations and NOAA.
Strong, on paper. The high school graduation rate in Raleigh is 92.0%, and classrooms average a 15:1 student-to-teacher ratio. That puts the district above most national benchmarks. Individual schools still vary — a few are outstanding, others are just solid — so look up specific school ratings on your state's education department site before choosing where to live.
About what you'd expect anywhere. The average monthly utility bill in Raleigh runs around $220 for electricity, gas, water, and sewer combined. The national average is $230, so you're right in line. Your actual bill depends on home size, insulation quality, and how much you run the AC or heater — but no surprises here.
Good, overall. The median AQI sits at 42, which falls within the EPA's "Good" category, and Raleigh logs 268 clean-air days annually. Ozone is the main pollutant. Occasional spikes happen — wildfire smoke, temperature inversions, or high-ozone days — but they're the exception, not the rule. Check AirNow.gov during allergy season or summer heat waves.
Higher than average, yes. The total effective tax rate lands around 13.3% when you add up income, property, and sales taxes. Sales tax is 7.3%. High-tax areas often come with better public schools, infrastructure, and services — but that's not guaranteed, and it's cold comfort on payday. If you're moving from a low-tax state like Texas or Florida, brace for a noticeable dip in take-home pay.
Yes. Raleigh's water system scores 89/100 in our analysis — zero health-based violations on record, and the lead risk rating is "low." It meets or exceeds all EPA standards. You can fill a glass from the faucet without thinking twice. A basic pitcher filter can improve taste if you're particular, but it's not a safety concern.
Everything on this page is built from public government sources: rent and income figures from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS 5-Year Estimates, 2023); commute and transportation data from Census ACS tables B08303 and B08006; crime rates from the FBI Uniform Crime Report; climate risk assessments using FEMA disaster declarations and NOAA storm records; air quality measurements from the EPA's Air Quality System database; water quality compliance data from EPA records and the EWG Tap Water Database; school data from the National Center for Education Statistics; utility cost estimates from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. We refresh each dataset monthly through an automated pipeline and cross-check for anomalies. No surveys, no user-submitted guesses — just official federal data presented in a way that's actually useful for people researching a move.
Disclaimer: Data reflects city-wide averages from public sources. Individual neighborhoods, schools, and conditions may differ. Always verify with local agencies before making major decisions.
These calculators pair well with the Raleigh, NC dashboard.
City scores blend federal baseline data with community reports from residents. The more reports a city has, the more the score reflects current conditions rather than historical averages.
The overall score is a weighted average of four categories:
Confidence tells you how reliable a score is based on report volume and recency:
CityScore = (BaselineWeight × BaselineScore) + (CrowdWeight × CommunityScore)
CrowdWeight grows from 0% to 50% as reports accumulate. Verified reports count double.
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