Sky high costs of transport, rent, internet sees Dublin’s affordability plunge

Global survey of cities shows Dublin performing poorly in many areas

The average cost of a monthly public transport ticket in Dublin is €114.95. File photograph: Eric Luke/The Irish Times
The average cost of a monthly public transport ticket in Dublin is €114.95. File photograph: Eric Luke/The Irish Times

Dublin has the second highest transport costs in the world , according to a global survey of 55 major cities.

The average cost of a monthly public transport ticket in Dublin is €114.95, the Deutsche Bank research of 55 global cities suggests. By comparison a monthly travel pass in New York, the 5th most expensive city, costs €108.57.

Only London is more expensive than Dublin and is a complete outlier with an average monthly travel pass cost of €160.60.

Soaring accommodation costs has seen Dublin leap up the table of the most expensive cities to rent.

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The capital has climbed from the 18th most expensive city in the survey to rent out a mid-range two bedroom apartment to 8th. Between 2014 and 2019 the cost of rent rose by 23 per cent in Dublin from an average of €1,466 to €1,811.

Even those figures do not tell the same story as the Deutsche Bank survey is denominated in dollars and the Euro has fallen by 20 per cent against the dollar in the last five years.

In the same timeframe monthly salaries net of taxes in Dublin fell by 4 per cent from €2,646 a month to €2,529.

As a consequence net disposable incomes after rents saw Dublin fall eight places from 15th to 23th in the list.

Disposable incomes in Dublin have plunged by 15 per cent between 2014 and 2019 from €1,806 to €1,623 a month.

Statista.com
Statista.com

Dublin has the second most expensive broadband of the cities surveyed. The average cost of a month of internet access (8Mbps) in Dublin is €46.60. Only Dubai at €73.50 costs more.

Dublin, though was only a mid-ranking city in terms of the cost of a cappuccino (30th out of 55), a full course dinner for two in an Indian restaurant (21st out of 55th) and for a meal out in a neighbourhood pub for two (17th out of 55).

The average cost of a “cheap date” comprising of a taxi journey, dinner for two, soft drinks, two movie tickets and a couple of beers is €106.84, only the 21st most expensive of the city’s surveyed.

Taxi fares too are relatively cheap in Dublin; the city is 21st most expensive for a taxi journey and 29th to hire a car for the day.

Dublin fares badly on the quality of life index, falling 21 places from 22nd to 43rd out of the 55 cities surveyed.

The city with the highest quality of life is Zurich in Switzerland, followed by Wellington in New Zealand, Copenhagen in Denmark and Edinburgh in Scotland.

The city with the highest monthly salary is San Francisco, the tech capital of the United States and of the world, where average net after-tax incomes have increased by 88 per cent over the last five years from €3,115 in 2014 to €5,858 fuelled by the city's continuing tech boom.

San Francisco also has the highest net disposable income after rents are paid followed by Zurich in Switzerland, Chicago, Boston and New York city.

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy is a news reporter with The Irish Times