GET OUT YOUR CREDIT CARD
- Share via
Traveling to Tokyo? It will cost you a pretty penny. The budget traveler may want to consider the least expensive cities first. Statistics come from the 2009 Mercer Cost of Living Survey released in July; it uses 200 items, including food and entertainment, to rank, by affordability, 143 cities with ex-pat populations. Currency value fluctuation reflects a one-day snapshot of each country’s currency, using exchange rates relative to the U.S. dollar.
-- Jason La
Most expensive cities
*--* City Ranking in 2008 Currency fluctuation 1. Tokyo, the capital of 2 +12% Japan, more than 12 million residents 2. Osaka, Japan’s 11 +12% second-largest city 3. Moscow, Russia’s capital 1 -13% and an economic powerhouse 4. Geneva, in Switzerland, but 8 No change the global center for diplomacy 5. Hong Kong, a special 6 +1% administrative region of China 6. Zurich, Switzerland’s 9 No change largest city and its financial center 7. Copenhagen, Denmark’s 7 -5% capital and extremely bike-friendly 8. New York, the capital of 22 n/a culture and commerce 9. Beijing, once a budget 20 No change travel destination but not since the Olympics 10.Singapore, developed from a 13 -2% fishing village into a world player *--*
Least expensive cities
*--* 143. Johannesburg, South Africa, 2010 World Cup soccer 140 -4% venue 142. Monterrey, a mixture of modern and historic Mexico 131 -28% 141. Asuncion, Paraguay, founded in 1537 143 -23% 140. Karachi, center of Pakistan’s banking, industry and 141 -7% trade 139. Wellington, the center of New Zealand’s film industry 93 -6% 138. Auckland, on New Zealand’s North Island, has over 30% 78 -6% of the population 137. Mexico City, the capital and home to 9 million 108 -28% 136. Quito, Ecuador, founded on the ruins of an Incan city 142 n/a* 135. Chennai, once known as Madras, fifth-largest city in 117 -12% India 134. Tunis, Tunisia, where the old town is a UNESCO site 133 -9% *--*
*Ecuador’s currency is the U.S. dollar.
Source: Mercer’s 2009 Cost of Living Survey
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.