The hard numbers. All sourced. No spin. Updated quarterly.
| County | Avg 1-Bed Rent | Livable Salary* | Avg Score Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dublin City | €2,011/mo | €74,000 | Professionally Broke |
| Cork City | €1,620/mo | €60,000 | Irish Poor™ |
| Galway City | €1,590/mo | €58,000 | Irish Poor™ |
| Limerick City | €1,420/mo | €52,000 | Technically Fine |
| Mayo | €920/mo | €38,000 | Technically Fine |
| Donegal | €880/mo | €35,000 | Comfortably Solvent |
*Livable salary = gross income at which a single adult renting has ~€600/week life money (RTB rents, Budget 2026 tax)
At €74k gross, after income tax, USC and PRSI, a Dublin renter with one child has roughly €600/week of disposable money — enough for a functional but not lavish life. Below €60k with kids and Dublin rent, you're structurally stretched regardless of lifestyle.
€24,132 per year in rent on a take-home of — let's say €45,000 on a €65k salary — means 54% of your net income goes straight to your landlord before you buy a single item. The EU affordable housing threshold is 30%.
Combined effect of CPI inflation, rent increases (+87% in Dublin since 2015), and tax bracket creep means high earners' actual spending power hasn't kept pace. The median income in Ireland is ~€38k. A €100k salary sounds elite — it isn't what it once was.
Full-time crèche in Dublin: €1,450/mo (after NCS subsidy). Maternity leave pay cut: ~€7,000 income loss for average earner. Equipment, medical, clothing: ~€3,000. Year One total: €23,000+. The state contributes approximately €3,100 via Child Benefit. You're on the hook for the rest.
The global "affordable" benchmark is 3–4× annual income. Dublin median house price ~€480,000 against median gross earnings of ~€36,500 (CSO 2024) = 13.1× multiple. Mortgage stress test at 3.5× income means most buyers need >€100k salary or large family help.
Earners above €70,044 lose 40% PAYE + 8% USC + 4.2% PRSI = 52.2% marginal rate on every additional euro. This catches not just the wealthy — a Dublin senior engineer at €90k is deep into this bracket. The practical effect: a €10k pay rise nets you €4,780.
Despite falling wholesale prices, Irish household electricity unit rates remain among the highest in the EU (Eurostat 2025). A 3-bed with gas heating pays ~€220/month. Government credits (€125/credit in 2025–26) reduce but don't solve the problem.
Driving to Dublin from commuter belt: M50 toll €3.10/day, parking €15–30/day (private), fuel €80–120/month. Total easily exceeds €480/month. Against a public transport commute at ~€180/month (TFI Leap), the car costs 2.7× more — before insurance and NCT.