Cost of Living in the UK by City: Compare Rent, Bills and Affordability

Cost of Living in Newport Wales 2026 — Complete Guide

Newport is one of Wales's most affordable cities with fast links to Cardiff and Bristol. Here's the full 2026 cost of living guide: rents, bills, transport, and salary requirements.

Newport is located in South East Wales, just 12 miles from Cardiff and 45 miles from Bristol, making it one of the best-positioned commuter cities in Wales. Its combination of genuinely low rents, fast rail access, and improving city centre regeneration has made it increasingly attractive to those seeking affordable living near major employment hubs.

Economy and Employment in Newport

Understanding the local employment market helps assess whether a salary offer in Newport makes sense in context.

Newport employment profile
Key sectorsManufacturing And Public Services
Key employersTata Steel (Port Talbot nearby), LG Electronics (historical), NHS Wales
Graduate opportunitiesAvailable in healthcare, public sector and local industry
Remote working impactGrowing number of professionals commuting to larger centres or working fully remote

Newport is primarily a manufacturing and public services economy. This profile shapes salary expectations — roles in the dominant sectors typically pay well relative to local rents, while consumer-facing roles (hospitality, retail) align closely to the National Living Wage.

For those relocating to Newport for work, the relatively lower cost of living compared to London and the South East means that a salary of £28,000–£38,000 can provide a comfortable lifestyle — equivalent to £45,000–£55,000 in greater London in purchasing power terms.

See our Cost of Living in Cardiff guide and our Cost of Living by City hub.

Newport Cost of Living Summary 2026

CategorySingle (monthly)Couple (monthly)Family (monthly)
Rent (average)£530–£730£700–£950£820–£1,100
Utilities£110–£160£135–£185£165–£225
Council Tax (Band D)~£175~£175~£175
Transport£60–£250£120–£360£150–£420
Groceries£165–£240£285–£385£370–£505
Internet and mobile£38–£58£48–£68£58–£82
Entertainment£60–£125£105–£215£135–£270
Total (excl. rent)£608–£1,008£868–£1,368£1,048–£1,677
Total (incl. rent)£1,138–£1,738£1,568–£2,318£1,868–£2,777

Housing Costs in Newport

Rental Prices by Area (2026)

Area1-bed flat2-bed flat3-bed houseCharacter
City Centre£620–£850£800–£1,080£980–£1,320Regenerating
Caerleon£650–£900£840–£1,130£1,020–£1,380Roman history, desirable
Rogerstone£620–£870£820–£1,100£1,000–£1,350Suburban, popular
Cwmbran (adjacent)£570–£790£740–£1,000£880–£1,190New town, good value
St Julians£540–£760£710–£960£870–£1,160Mixed, affordable
Pill£450–£640£600–£810£740–£990Most affordable

Buying in Newport

AreaAverage house priceFirst-time buyer viable?
Caerleon£180,000–£300,000With deposit
Rogerstone£160,000–£260,000Achievable
City Centre (flats)£100,000–£175,000Very accessible
Pill / St Julians£90,000–£150,000Excellent value

The Cardiff Commuter Advantage

Newport’s biggest draw for many residents is the ability to access Cardiff’s jobs market at a fraction of Cardiff’s rent:

FactorNewportCardiff
Average 1-bed city centre£600–£850£850–£1,150
Train to Cardiff10–20 mins
Monthly season ticket~£125
Net monthly saving£200–£400

For a Cardiff-based worker on £35,000+, living in Newport can save £2,000–£4,000/year after season ticket costs.

What Salary Do You Need?

LifestyleAnnual salary (single person)
Minimum (shared house)£17,000–£20,000
Comfortable (own 1-bed, working locally)£20,000–£24,000
Comfortable (commuting to Cardiff)£23,000–£27,000
Good quality of life (savings, car)£27,000–£34,000

Newport vs Comparable Cities

City1-bed city centreCommute to Cardiff
Newport£600–£85010–20 min train
Cwmbran£550–£78020–30 min train
Cardiff£850–£1,150
Swansea£650–£90050–60 min train
Bristol£1,100–£1,50045–55 min train

See our Cost of Living in Cardiff guide, Cost of Living in Swansea guide, and our average UK salary guide.

Sources

  1. ONS — Private rental market statistics Wales
  2. Newport City Council