A humid continental with warm humid summers and cold winters city of 2,250,000, currency USD, primary language English with 138 community languages. Scored 7.2 on the everycity index across cost, safety, weather, jobs and twelve more axes.
A humid continental city, 2,250,000 people, the city profile in one stat grid.
Queens scored 7.2 on the everycity index, placing it in the strong tier of the global cohort of 5,000 cities. A single person spends $3,180 a month here including rent, groceries, transport and utilities. A working couple spends $5,180. Internet runs at a median 235 Mbps on residential fiber per OOKLA Speedtest readings from April 2026. The average reported salary, blended across sectors, is $6,450 a month. The highest marginal income tax rate is 37 percent. Safety reads 7.2 on a 0 to 10 scale, with the night safety subindex at 6.6, the female solo subindex at 7.0, and the family subindex at 7.4. The metro area holds 2,250,000 people and sits at 40.728224 degrees, -73.794852 degrees. The summer high lands at 30 Celsius, the winter low at -3. The city averages 2,535 sunshine hours a year.
Compared with peer cities, Queens sits within the United States Northeast metropolitan cohort on monthly outlay. See Brooklyn vs Queens for the head to head numbers. For broader context, the americas continent page ranks the region's top 25 cities. For salary comparisons across jurisdictions, run the tax calculator, or read the after tax salary comparison longform. The full method behind the everycity composite is published on the methodology page.
Every number below comes from Numbeo Q1 2026, cross checked against national statistics offices and Mercer's 2025 Cost of Living Survey.
| Item | Detail | USD per month |
|---|---|---|
| Rent, one bedroom, city center | furnished, market rate | $2,280 |
| Rent, one bedroom, outer ring | 30 minute commute | $1,680 |
| Rent, three bedroom, city center | family unit | $3,780 |
| Groceries | per person, supermarket | $540 |
| Transport | monthly metro or fuel | $132 |
| Utilities | electricity, water, refuse | $240 |
| Internet | residential fiber, 235 Mbps | $85 |
| Dinner for two | mid range restaurant | $85 |
| Coffee | cappuccino, sit down cafe | $5.2 |
| Gym | full service, monthly | $78 |
| Single person total | $3,180 | |
| Working couple total | $5,180 |
A single person budgets $3,180 a month to live in Queens at the median Numbeo basket. Rent is the largest line item, with a furnished one bedroom in the city center commanding $2,280 a month and an outer ring equivalent landing at $1,680. Groceries, transport, utilities and internet together add another $997 a month. The local currency is the United States dollar, the global reserve and the local unit, freely convertible. Most relocating professionals open a multi currency account with Wise before the move to avoid the 0 to 1.8 percent retail FX spread that local banks charge on cross border transfers.
Compared regionally, Queens sits within the United States Northeast metropolitan cohort working range. The cheapest cities ranking places Queens in the relevant cohort. For an after tax comparison across jobs, run the cost of living calculator, or read the after tax salary comparison. For long term rentals the active local platforms are listed on the banking and rental platforms guide. See also Brooklyn vs Queens and New York vs Queens.
No moral panic, no rose tint. Four subindices, all referenced to the latest national crime statistics and Numbeo's crowdsourced safety panel.
| Subindex | Score 0 to 10 | Band |
|---|---|---|
| Overall safety | 7.2 | Workable |
| Solo female safety | 7.0 | Workable |
| Family with children | 7.4 | Workable |
| Night walk, alone | 6.6 | Workable |
Queens's overall safety score lands at 7.2, which places it in the workable band on the everycity index. The female solo subindex reads 7.0 and the night walk subindex reads 6.6, both of which capture the variance between daytime and after dark experience. Family safety, weighted for primary school commute risk, sits at 7.4. Health insurance for relocating expats typically runs $45 to $145 a month through SafetyWing, which the editorial team uses on assignment. For broader context the global safest cities ranking places Queens alongside its regional peers in the cohort table.
The neighborhoods that draw the bulk of incident reports are noted in section 6. The areas that draw the fewest are listed there as well, with rents reflecting both reputation and reality. A foreigner walking with a phone in hand on a main avenue at 1 a.m. should not assume the safest neighborhood numbers apply to that scenario; the 6.6 night subindex is the figure that matters. Solo female nomads should read the safest cities for women ranking alongside this profile, and the best cities for women to live longform. See Bronx vs Queens for the head to head safety read against the most common peer city.
Twelve months at a glance, with sunshine hours, humidity and rainy day counts pulled from the WMO 1991 to 2020 normals.
The climate is classified as humid continental with warm humid summers and cold winters in the Köppen system. Annual rainfall covers 122 days. Humidity averages 64 percent, the city receives 2,535 hours of sunshine a year, and the temperature swing between the coldest and warmest months runs 33 degrees Celsius. The single most comfortable month for an outdoor lifestyle is October, when the average high reaches 19 and the average low 9 degrees Celsius. The harshest stretch is January, where outdoor activity outside of morning hours becomes unpleasant for the heat or cold sensitive.
Compared with peer cities, Queens runs at the regional median for ambient comfort across the calendar year. For climate matched alternatives, run the climate match tool. The best cities for weather ranking places Queens in the workable cohort. To find the optimal visit window before relocating, use the best month to visit tool, and for direct peer comparison see Jersey City vs Queens.
Salaries are gross monthly figures, blended from national labour bureau data and Glassdoor postings active in March 2026.
| Role | Detail | USD per month, gross |
|---|---|---|
| City average | blended sectors | $6,450 |
| Senior software developer | five plus years | $13,500 |
| Senior financial analyst | five plus years | $11,200 |
| Top marginal income tax | employee | 37 percent federal on income above $626,350 for a single filer in 2025, plus 10.9 percent New York State on income above $25 million, plus 3.876 percent New York City personal income tax |
| Corporate tax | standard rate | 21 percent federal plus 7.25 percent New York State corporate franchise tax (8.25 percent for sales above $5 million) plus 8.85 percent New York City general corporation tax |
The blended average salary in Queens runs $6,450 a month, gross of tax. A senior software developer earns $13,500 on local payroll, while a senior financial analyst commands $11,200. The largest employers are listed above; together they represent between 14 and 28 percent of formal sector employment in the metro area depending on the year measured. The top marginal income tax rate is 37 percent. Corporate tax sits at the rate noted in the table above. Expats moving regular income across borders typically use Wise at the daily mid market rate, which removes the 0 to 1.8 percent retail spread that local banks charge.
For an accurate after tax estimate including local social security, run the tax calculator. For a market wide salary view, the highest salary cities ranking and the highest paying cities after tax ranking place Queens in the relevant cohort. The lowest tax cities ranking covers the relative position on tax. For a peer set comparison, run Brooklyn vs Queens and New York vs Queens.
A working map of where to live in Queens in 2026, ordered loosely from highest cost to lowest commute.
the western residential anchor along the 30th Avenue corridor, the highest density of Greek, Egyptian, North African and Brazilian restaurants in any United States neighborhood, walking distance to the N and W subway lines.
the post industrial waterfront quarter facing Midtown Manhattan, the cluster of new build high rises since 2010, the highest price per square foot of any neighborhood in Queens.
the central residential corridor along the 7 line, the most affordable walkable family neighborhoods inside the central transit zone, mixed pre war and post war stock.
the historic apartment block district on the 7 line, the densest South Asian and Latin American neighborhood in the United States, walking distance to the Roosevelt Avenue food corridor.
the eastern commercial anchor, the largest East Asian neighborhood outside Manhattan Chinatown, the dense Korean and Chinese restaurant and shopping cluster.
the upscale residential anchor, walking distance to the 71st Avenue E and F lines, the highest concentration of family co operative housing in the borough.
the eastern suburban residential expansion, single family homes near the Long Island border, the calmest school catchments in the borough.
The seven quarters above cover the spread of the rental market in Queens for a relocating professional. Astoria is the highest priced and the most likely to deliver the lifestyle a Western expat imagines. Long Island City is the upscale residential pick at a different price point. Sunnyside and Woodside is the value pick at the cost of a longer commute. Jackson Heights is the cultural pick, suited to short term assignments or those who prefer density to silence. The full neighborhood by neighborhood walk through, with photos, is in the Queens neighborhoods longform, scheduled to publish in Q3 2026.
Long term rental supply in Queens is concentrated in the four to seven year old apartment stock; older buildings often lack reliable elevators or, in some neighborhoods, reliable hot water during the coldest months. Furnished one bedroom listings turn over in a median 11 days at the city center price point and 7 days in the outer ring per the local portals indexed by the editorial property platform guide. The neighborhood matcher tool will rank the seven against your weighted preferences if you score them: neighborhood matcher. For peer city neighborhood maps, see Philadelphia vs Queens.
Healthcare quality is a 0 to 10 score derived from WHO outcome data, expat survey panels, and waiting time reports from the national health authority.
Queens's healthcare quality score lands at 7.6 on the everycity scale, placing it in the strong band. United States operates a national health system that covers residents at the relevant statutory rate. Private complementary insurance through local and international carriers rounds out the cover. the NewYork Presbyterian Queens, the NYU Langone Hospital Long Island, and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Queens is the major specialist anchor in the metro.
For routine care, a private general practitioner visit in Queens runs the local equivalent of $220 to $480, with reimbursement available through international plans. A specialist consultation costs $320 to $720. The nearest hospitals with full intensive care capacity are listed in the metropolitan health authority directory; the closest one to the central business district is within a 15 minute drive in normal traffic. For comparisons in the same income band, see Brooklyn vs Queens and the family friendly cities ranking. For visa adjacent medical insurance requirements, the visa difficulty checker flags which programs require proof of cover. An expat moving for more than 90 days should budget $45 to $145 a month for international cover, depending on age and deductible; the most commonly used providers for short to mid term assignments are SafetyWing, Cigna Global, and Allianz Care.
School and university density, plus the practical commute to each option.
Relocating families in Queens typically pick from the school cluster listed above. Tuition for relocating expatriate families typically runs $28,500 a year at the private day school options and $62,500 a year at the international baccalaureate flagships. Waiting lists for grade entry between January and August are common; the most popular options publish their priority dates on the national education ministry portal each November. The combined family safety subindex of 7.4 on the everycity index should be read alongside the school commute when ranking neighborhoods.
For comparable family rated cities in the region, the family friendly cities ranking and the best cities for international schools ranking are the right starting points. The best cities to raise a family longform covers the parental leave, primary school commute, and weekend public space variables in detail. For local pediatric specialists, the editorial guide on international health insurance lists the in network hospitals near each Queens school cluster. The United States country page covers the national education policy context.
Walkability, transit, biking and the car question, each on the same 0 to 10 scale.
| Mode | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Walkability | 8.4 | weighted for sidewalk quality, density |
| Public transit | 9.2 | A car is not needed in the central neighborhoods of Queens that border the subway lines. The MTA New York City Subway runs the 7 line (the Flushing line), the E and F (the Queens Boulevard locals), the M and R (the Forest Hills locals), the J and Z (the Jamaica line) and the A (the Rockaway line) through the borough, the Long Island Rail Road provides a parallel commuter rail to Penn Station and Grand Central, and the bus network is the densest in the United States. A car remains useful for the outer south east neighborhoods. |
| Cycling | 6.2 | protected lane kilometers, weighted |
| Car needed | Not needed in central neighborhoods | The Queens metro and bus profile is detailed in the row above. |
Queens scores 8.4 on walkability, 9.2 on transit, and 6.2 on cycling. A car is not needed in the central neighborhoods of Queens that border the subway lines. The MTA New York City Subway runs the 7 line (the Flushing line), the E and F (the Queens Boulevard locals), the M and R (the Forest Hills locals), the J and Z (the Jamaica line) and the A (the Rockaway line) through the borough, the Long Island Rail Road provides a parallel commuter rail to Penn Station and Grand Central, and the bus network is the densest in the United States. A car remains useful for the outer south east neighborhoods. For occasional short term mobility, the editorial side note on rental cars for relocation scouting covers the day rates available at the Queens airport ranks. A monthly metro or city wide transit pass costs $132 where applicable.
For walkable peer cities, the most walkable cities for kids ranking places Queens in the relevant cohort. For cycling alternatives in the region, the best cities for cyclists ranking lists the regional leaders, and Brooklyn vs Queens compares the door to door commute experience in detail.
Food signatures, nightlife rating, and the cultural through line that separates Queens from its regional neighbors.
The food signatures of Queens include the 138 community languages translate into 138 community cuisines (Queens is the most linguistically diverse urban county in the world), the Roosevelt Avenue corridor in Jackson Heights for Colombian, Ecuadorian, Mexican, Tibetan and Nepali, the Northern Boulevard corridor in Astoria for Greek, Egyptian, Lebanese and Brazilian, the Main Street corridor in Flushing for Sichuan, Korean, Taiwanese, Shanghainese and Cantonese, the Liberty Avenue corridor in Richmond Hill for Trinidadian and Guyanese roti and doubles, the bagel shops and pizza counters of the central avenues for the United States staples. The high points of the dining year run through September through mid October and April through May, when restaurant temperatures sit at the comfortable end of the range and the produce calendar peaks. For longer reads on the cuisine, the best food cities ranking and the Michelin cities ranking place Queens in the relevant cohort regionally. Nightlife sits at a 7.8 rating on the everycity scale, with weeknight venue density highest in Astoria and Long Island City. For coffee culture, the editorial guide on local routines for expats is the right starting point.
The cultural calendar runs through the local national holidays plus two or three city specific festivals that bring the largest annual foot traffic. The United States cultural and creative industries policy is reviewed in detail on the United States country page, and the americas continent page covers the broader pattern across the region. For peer city comparisons, see New York vs Queens and the best nightlife cities ranking. Visitors planning a scouting trip should also read the best cities for singles longform and the best cities for couples longform.
Internet speed, coworking density, nomad visa status, time zone fit.
| Variable | Reading |
|---|---|
| Median residential download | 235 Mbps |
| Coworking spaces in metro | 42 |
| Nomad visa | No formal digital nomad visa. The United States issues B 1 business and B 2 tourist visas with a six month maximum stay, the L 1 intracompany transfer visa, the O 1 extraordinary ability visa for technology and creative professionals, the E 2 treaty investor visa for citizens of 80 partner countries, and the EB 5 investor program at the $800,000 to $1,050,000 investment threshold. |
| Time zone | UTC minus 5 (Eastern), UTC minus 4 with daylight saving |
| Power reliability | Very high. The Con Edison grid runs at United States Northeast standard, urban outages are rare and resolved within a 4 to 12 hour window for storm related events. |
The median residential download in Queens runs 235 Mbps on fiber per OOKLA Speedtest Global Index, April 2026. Coworking venues operate at scale in the metro area; the most established cluster sits in the central commercial corridor and serves the highest concentration of remote workers on long term assignment. No formal digital nomad visa. The United States issues B 1 business and B 2 tourist visas with a six month maximum stay, the L 1 intracompany transfer visa, the O 1 extraordinary ability visa for technology and creative professionals, the E 2 treaty investor visa for citizens of 80 partner countries, and the EB 5 investor program at the $800,000 to $1,050,000 investment threshold. For privacy on public WiFi, the editorial side note on NordVPN covers the case for a VPN abroad and the privacy implications of United States's data laws.
For comparable remote work cities, the best cities for remote work ranking and the digital nomad cities ranking place Queens in the relevant cohort. The best coworking cities ranking and the fastest internet cities ranking cover the regional benchmarks. For the broader 2026 nomad visa landscape, the longform on best digital nomad visas of 2026 is the editorial reference.
Move here if you work at the JFK or LaGuardia airport hubs and want a 30 minute commute (Astoria, Long Island City and Jackson Heights), you are placed at NewYork Presbyterian Queens or the Mount Sinai Queens hospital network, you are a finance professional at the Citigroup Long Island City campus, you are a JetBlue or Delta crew member based at JFK, or you want the borough with the deepest community language and food market in the United States at a 32 percent rent discount to Manhattan.
Queens scored 7.2 on the everycity index because the cost stack at $3,180 a month for a single person is 32 percent below the Manhattan equivalent and 22 percent below the Brooklyn equivalent, the transit subindex of 9.2 is the highest of any city in this batch (the subway lines and LIRR commuter rail deliver the deepest urban transit network in the United States), the diversity of the food and community language ecosystem is the global benchmark for the borough scale, the safety subindex of 7.2 has improved in every reporting cycle since 2020 and the borough's median household income at $79,500 places it above the New York City median.
Do not move here if you cannot tolerate the cost stack (the per square foot rent rate at the central neighborhoods is competitive with Brooklyn and not far from Manhattan), if you cannot tolerate the New York tax stack (37 percent federal plus 10.9 percent state plus 3.876 percent city is the highest combined personal rate of any major city in the country), if you need a Manhattan trading floor or media job on the doorstep (the L 7 and E train commutes are 25 to 45 minutes door to door, which is workable but not zero), or if the airport noise (the JFK and LaGuardia approach corridors run over the western and central neighborhoods) is a binding constraint on your housing search. Most regret in Queens comes from people who flew in for a long weekend, booked a furnished apartment on impulse, and then realized the lifestyle they actually wanted was the one on offer in New York or Brooklyn.
Run the relocation score against your current city to see the delta, and read the head to head against the most common alternative in the region: Brooklyn vs Queens.
Numbeo cost of living Q1 2026; national statistics office labour force survey 2025; the central bank monetary policy report April 2026; the national tax authority pay schedules 2026; Queens metropolitan government statistical yearbook 2025; OOKLA Speedtest Global Index April 2026; the national police crime statistics 2024; Mercer Quality of Living Survey 2025; OECD national accounts 2025 release; World Bank country indicators 2025 vintage. The everycity index is a weighted composite of cost, safety, weather, jobs, healthcare, transport, education, internet, governance and culture. Full weighting is published on the methodology page. All figures in this report were last refreshed on May 14, 2026. Photography: Unsplash, used under the Unsplash License with attribution to photographers via the source links.