Can You Live on $2,000/month?
Sweden vs Austria — Budget Breakdown & Lifestyle Analysis
Source: Numbeo 2026 country rankings (cost indices) and OECD 2025 PPP rates · Reviewed April 2026
Feasibility Assessment
Sweden
COL+Rent Index: 44.0 (NYC = 100)
$2,000/mo comfortably covers all typical expenses in Sweden.
Austria
COL+Rent Index: 50.7 (NYC = 100)
$2,000/mo barely covers basics in Austria. Expect limited discretionary spending.
Budget Breakdown: $2,000/Month
| Category | Sweden | Austria | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (avg 1BR) | $1,073 | $957 | +$116 |
| Groceries | $338 | $413 | $75 |
| Dining Out | $206 | $205 | +$1 |
| Transportation | $103 | $59 | +$44 |
| Utilities | $120 | $223 | $103 |
| Other / Misc | $160 | $143 | +$17 |
| Total | $2,000 | $2,000 | — |
Budget allocated proportionally based on each country's actual cost structure. Both columns show how the same $$2,000 budget would be spent differently.
Purchasing Power Comparison
Using OECD Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) rates, we can estimate what the same standard of living costs in each country.
Sweden
$2,000
per month
Austria (PPP equivalent)
$2,305
per month
You would need $2,305/mo in Austria to match the purchasing power of $2,000/mo in Sweden — Austria is effectively more expensive.
What Does $2,000/Month Buy You?
Sweden
- $1,073 (54%) goes to rent — decent 1BR apartment feasible
- $544 (27%) for food — regular dining out possible
- $103 for transit — monthly pass + occasional taxi
- $160 discretionary — modest entertainment budget
Groceries Index: 51.8 · Restaurant Index: 51.2 · Local Purchasing Power: 99.4
Austria
- $957 (48%) goes to rent — decent 1BR apartment feasible
- $618 (31%) for food — regular dining out possible
- $59 for transit — public transit covered
- $143 discretionary — very limited extras
Groceries Index: 72.6 · Restaurant Index: 71.5 · Local Purchasing Power: 120.0