The question isn’t whether Nashville is cheap — it’s whether your specific income supports a comfortable lifestyle here in 2026. Generic cost-of-living indexes don’t capture the real monthly budget experience. Here’s the realistic breakdown.
Housing: The Biggest Budget Line
Buying: The Nashville metro median home price of approximately $460,000 translates to a monthly mortgage payment of approximately $2,500 (assuming 20% down, 6.5% interest rate, including property taxes and insurance). With less than 20% down, add PMI of $100 to $200 monthly.
Renting: The median rent for a two-bedroom apartment in the Nashville metro runs approximately $1,650 per month. One-bedrooms run $200 to $300 less; three-bedrooms run $200 to $400 more.
Housing should consume no more than 28% to 33% of gross income for financial health. At the median mortgage payment, you need a household income of approximately $62,000 to $72,000 to comfortably afford homeownership at the median price point.
Utilities
Monthly utilities for a median-sized home average approximately $195 — covering electricity, gas, water, sewer, and trash. Internet adds $60 to $80. Cell phone plans run $50 to $80 per person. The total utility package runs $285 to $335 monthly for a typical household.
Groceries and Dining
A household of two spending moderately on groceries budgets approximately $400 per month. Dining out adds $200 to $400 depending on frequency. Nashville’s restaurant scene offers options across all price points, but regular dining out is the budget category most people underestimate.
Transportation
Nashville is car-dependent for most residents. Monthly transportation costs average approximately $450 — including car payment ($350 to $500), insurance ($120 to $200), gas ($100 to $150), and maintenance reserves. Two-car households approximately double this figure.
Healthcare
Healthcare costs for a typical household average approximately $500 monthly, including employer-subsidized insurance premiums, copays, prescriptions, and out-of-pocket expenses. Costs vary dramatically based on employer coverage, family size, and individual health needs.
Taxes
Tennessee has no state income tax — a significant advantage that offsets higher housing costs. Federal taxes apply at standard rates. The effective total tax burden shapes your take-home pay and determines how much of your gross income is available for the budget items above.
The Realistic Monthly Budget
For a household earning $62,000 gross annually (approximately the Nashville metro median household income):
After federal and state taxes, take-home pay is approximately $3,500 to $4,000 monthly. The core expenses — housing ($2,500 or $1,650), utilities ($300), groceries ($400), transportation ($450), and healthcare ($500) — total $2,975 to $3,875. The gap between take-home and expenses determines savings capacity, discretionary spending, and financial comfort.
The Verdict
It depends on your income. Nashville is affordable for dual-income households but stretches single-income budgets at the median home price.
For more on Nashville’s costs, explore our complete cost of living breakdown and affordability calculator.