Menu
Menu

Mexico Flag Mexico

Country Overview

Business Culture

Clothing Size Guides

Communications

Cost of Living

Culture and Society

Demographics

Driving and Autos

Economy and Trade

Education

Educational Resources

Environment

Export Process

Food Culture and Drink

Geography

Government

Health and Medical

History

Holidays and Festivals

Import Process

Language

Kids' Stuff

LGBTQ+

Life Stages

Maps

Media Outlets

Money and Banking

Music

Names

National Symbols

Points of Interest

Quality of Life

Real Estate

Religion

Security Briefing

Social Indicators

Travel Essentials

Cost of Living: Apartment Rental Costs

World Trade Press Cost of Living modules include up-to-date data for 11,000 cities worldwide.

  • Prices are reported in the local currency.
  • Prices include sales taxes (including GST and VAT).

Last updated: 1 June 2021.

Select a City

Notes on Prices

Current on-the-ground prices may vary for a number of reasons:

  • Price fluctuations can occur during a given year. For example, fruit prices are generally higher in winter months.
  • Different stores may have different prices for the same item.
  • Stores/markets within a city may have different prices for the same item depending upon the neighborhood.
  • A single store/market may offer different types and qualities of milk, cheese, oranges, etc.
  • A city may face temporary shortages which could drive the prices higher.

Methodology

  • Data for this feature have been crowdsourced from more than 500,000 contributors and scraped from authoritative sources (websites of supermarkets, taxi companies, governmental institutions, newspaper ads, etc.).
  • Data collected from user inputs are entered daily.
  • Scraped data from established sources are entered multiple times per year.
  • Automatic and semi-automatic filters are used to filter out data noise. User behavior and historic data for the city/country is used to determine likelihood that a given input is valid. More than 30 sophisticated filters are in use.
  • Minimum user inputs for a specific datapoint equals seven (7).
  • User inputs greater than 12 months old are automatically depreciated. (Data up to 18 months old may be used if fresh data are not available and indicators suggest that inflation is low in a particular country).