Cost of living in Kyoto
Imperial capital meets student town — affordable culture, premium tourism.
Overview
Kyoto blends a 1,200-year cultural heritage with a youth-driven economy fueled by 35+ universities. Day-to-day living is moderate (cheaper than Tokyo, similar to Osaka), but anything tourist-facing — central hotels, traditional restaurants, taxis — carries a notable premium. Strict zoning preserves the historic streetscape, which limits new housing supply and keeps central rents firm.
What to know
Central Nakagyo or Sakyo: 60,000–85,000 JPY for 1K. The huge student population creates abundant share-house options at 30,000–45,000 JPY/room.
Kyoto's flat geography makes it Japan's most bike-friendly large city — many residents skip transit entirely. Subway lines are limited (just 2), but buses cover everything.
Two-tier pricing: weekday 定食 (set meals) at 800–1,000 JPY, but tourist-zone kaiseki dinners can hit 15,000+ JPY. Local supermarkets (Hanamasa, Fresco) have some of the lowest produce prices in the country.
Kyoto's CPI is slightly above the national average. Housing is the only meaningfully expensive category; food, utilities, and transport are all near or below national averages.
Avoid renting in Higashiyama or near Gion if you want quiet — these are tourist-saturated. North and west wards (Kita, Ukyo) are calmer and cheaper.
5-year price trend
Latest CPI by category (2020 = 100)
| Category | CPI (2026-03) |
|---|---|
| 식료 | 129.3 |
| 주거 | 104.5 |
| 광열·수도 | 102.0 |
| 가구·가사용품 | 133.3 |
| 피복·신발 | 109.6 |
| 보건의료 | 105.9 |
| 교통·통신 | 100.0 |
| 교육 | 98.2 |
| 교양오락 | 116.2 |
| 잡비 | 105.6 |