Can You Live on $2,000/month?
United States vs Hong Kong — Budget Breakdown & Lifestyle Analysis
Source: Numbeo 2026 country rankings (cost indices) and OECD 2025 PPP rates · Reviewed April 2026
Feasibility Assessment
United States
COL+Rent Index: 56.3 (NYC = 100)
$2,000/mo may not cover basic living costs in United States. Consider a higher budget.
Hong Kong
COL+Rent Index: 69.8 (NYC = 100)
$2,000/mo may not cover basic living costs in Hong Kong. Consider a higher budget.
Budget Breakdown: $2,000/Month
| Category | United States | Hong Kong | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (avg 1BR) | $1,159 | $1,299 | $140 |
| Groceries | $288 | $267 | +$21 |
| Dining Out | $185 | $75 | +$110 |
| Transportation | $56 | $42 | +$14 |
| Utilities | $137 | $122 | +$15 |
| Other / Misc | $175 | $195 | $20 |
| 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.
United States
$2,000
per month
Hong Kong (PPP equivalent)
$2,480
per month
You would need $2,480/mo in Hong Kong to match the purchasing power of $2,000/mo in United States — Hong Kong is effectively more expensive.
What Does $2,000/Month Buy You?
United States
- $1,159 (58%) goes to rent — decent 1BR apartment feasible
- $473 (24%) for food — mostly home cooking
- $56 for transit — public transit covered
- $175 discretionary — modest entertainment budget
Groceries Index: 71.5 · Restaurant Index: 71.0 · Local Purchasing Power: 110.4
Hong Kong
- $1,299 (65%) goes to rent — city-center apartment may be challenging
- $342 (17%) for food — mostly home cooking
- $42 for transit — public transit covered
- $195 discretionary — modest entertainment budget
Groceries Index: 75.1 · Restaurant Index: 51.1 · Local Purchasing Power: 91.6