What does it cost to live in Bridgeport, CT? Based on 7 federal sources (BEA Regional Price Parities 2024, HUD Fair Market Rents FY2026, EIA energy prices, IRS/state tax), a single adult's modeled annual budget is $66,086 and a family of four's is $119,496 (2025).
How much does a family of four need in Bridgeport?
A family of four (2 adults, 2 children) needs about $119,495/yr to break even in Bridgeport — roughly $9,958 a month. Housing is the largest single cost. This is a break-even budget of basic needs, not a recommended salary and not a composite index.
Components carry different grains, from ZIP or county (housing) to national adjusted to state price level (CEX rows via BEA Regional Price Parities). Not a recommended salary; not a poverty threshold; components are not weighted into a composite score. See family-of-four methodology →
BEA Regional Price Parities
How expensive is Bridgeport versus the U.S.?
The overall price level in non-metropolitan Connecticut is 97.9 against a U.S. average of 100 — −2.1% less expensive than the national average.
Owners with a mortgage in Bridgeport pay a median of 2,222/mo in selected owner costs.
Owner cost & property tax — place-grain from the ACS 5-Year 2020–2024. Median monthly selected owner costs (SMOC) cover mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, utilities, and condo fees where applicable; real-estate taxes paid is the median property-tax bill for owner-occupied units.
Utility prices in Connecticut — applies to Connecticut statewide (electricity and natural gas) or its PADD region (gasoline). Residential rates are state averages, not what any specific household pays.
Measure
Value
Grain / observation
Residential electricity
30.8¢/kWh
Connecticut statewide · monthly · 2026-02
Residential natural gas
$17.65/Mcf
Connecticut statewide · monthly · 2026-02
Retail gasoline
$4.60/gal
PADD 1A (New England) · weekly · week ending 2026-05-11
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) · state-grain · methodology →
Census Gov Finances FY2022
State tax burden.
Tax burden in Connecticut — combined state + local taxes per capita, from the U.S. Census Annual Survey of State and Local Government Finances (FY2022). Population denominator: Census PEP 2022 state estimate. State-grain only; this is revenue divided by people, not a household tax bill. "vs U.S. state average" compares one state to the unweighted mean across all 51 states + DC.
Measure
Value
vs U.S. state average
Total state + local taxes per capita
$9,680
6,836 avg · +42%
Property taxes per capita
$3,348
1,886 avg · +78%
Sales & gross receipts taxes per capita
$2,297
2,255 avg · +2%
Individual income taxes per capita
$2,719
1,617 avg · +68%
Corporate income taxes per capita
$1,005
393 avg · +156%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau Annual Survey of State and Local Government Finances · FY2022 · state-grain · methodology →
State Income Tax TY2025
State income tax.
Measure
Value
Note
Top state income tax rate (single filer)
6.99%
7 brackets, progressive · TY2025
Effective state income tax at $75k (single)
4.50%
after $0 standard deduction · TY2025
Full 7-bracket schedule
Income range (single)
Marginal rate
$0 – $10,000
2%
$10,000 – $50,000
4.5%
$50,000 – $100,000
5.5%
$100,000 – $200,000
6%
$200,000 – $250,000
6.5%
$250,000 – $500,000
6.9%
$500,000+
6.99%
Single filer rates for tax year 2025. Connecticut does not provide a general standard deduction; personal exemption phases out at higher incomes.
Income tax: state-level only. Local income taxes (e.g., NYC resident tax, Yonkers surcharge, Portland-OR Metro tax, Maryland county tax, Philadelphia wage tax, OH/KY/MI city income taxes) appear in the Local income tax section below when modeled. Effective rate at $75k is illustrative only — single filer with state standard deduction, no itemized deductions, no credits.
Source: Connecticut Department of Revenue Services · TY2025 · state-grain · methodology →
Tax Foundation TY2025
State + local sales tax.
Measure
Rate
Note
State sales tax rate
6.35%
statutory state rate · TY2025
Avg local sales tax rate
0.00%
Connecticut: state-only sales tax, no local option · Tax Foundation TY2025
Combined sales tax rate
6.35%
state + avg local · TY2025
Sales tax: state-grain. The "average local rate" is Tax Foundation's population-weighted state-average; actual local rates vary by city, county, and special taxing district. Selective sales taxes (hotels, meals, car rentals) and excise taxes (gasoline, tobacco, alcohol) are excluded.
Source: Tax Foundation · state statutes · TY2025 · methodology →
USDA Food Plans + Food Atlas
Food and grocery access.
Food and grocery access. USDA national food-cost reference plus USDA Food Environment Atlas county-level food access. National plan values are not adjusted for local prices.
Measure
Value
Grain / source
Thrifty Food Plan, family of 4
$996/mo
national reference, USDA CNPP
Moderate-Cost Plan, family of 4
$1,341/mo
national reference, USDA CNPP
Liberal Plan, family of 4
$1,619/mo
national reference, USDA CNPP
Grocery stores per 1,000 pop
0.22
county-grain, USDA ERS Atlas 2020
Low food-access population share
27.9%
county-grain, USDA ERS Atlas 2019
SNAP participation rate
10.6%
county-grain, USDA ERS Atlas 2022
Food Atlas county: Fairfield County, CT. USDA Food Plans observation: July 2025. Alaska and Hawaii shoppers should expect substantially higher prices than the national figure. See food methodology.
Monthly Household Budget Benchmark
Full budget itemization.
Monthly Household Budget Benchmark — estimated monthly cost of basic needs, composed from federal public-domain sources. Two compositions: single adult (1BR rental) and family of four, two adults working, two children ages 4 and 8 (3BR rental). Not a recommended salary, not a poverty threshold, not a composite index. Methodology informed by the MIT Living Wage Calculator and EPI Family Budget Calculator; figures independently computed from primary federal sources.
Single adult · 1BR rental
Component
Monthly
Grain / source
Housing (1BR rental)
$1,870/mo
HUD SAFMR FY2026, ZIP 06608
Food
$281/mo
national, USDA Low-Cost Plan 2025, state price-adjusted
Transportation
$1,080/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Healthcare (out-of-pocket)
$175/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Internet + cellular
$122/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024 (no sub-state federal source for ISP price)
Other necessities
$485/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Civic engagement
$319/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Taxes (federal + FICA + state)
$1,174/mo
TY2025, iteratively solved
Total monthly
$5,507/mo
mixed grain
Total annual
$66,086/yr
mixed grain
Gross income required (pre-tax)
$66,086/yr
mixed grain, TY2025 tax solver
Single adult, no dependents, single filing status.
Family of four · 3BR rental
Two adults working, two children (ages 4 and 8). Married Filing Jointly.
Component
Monthly
Grain / source
Housing (3BR rental)
$2,700/mo
HUD SAFMR FY2026, ZIP 06608, 3BR
Food
$1,065/mo
national, USDA Family-of-4 Plan 2025, state price-adjusted
national, BLS CEX 2024 (no sub-state federal source for ISP price)
Other necessities
$485/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Civic engagement
$319/mo
national, BLS CEX 2024, state price-adjusted
Taxes (federal + FICA + state, MFJ)
$1,744/mo
TY2025, iteratively solved, MFJ + EITC + CTC
Total monthly
$9,958/mo
mixed grain
Total annual
$119,496/yr
mixed grain
Gross income required (pre-tax, combined)
$119,495/yr
mixed grain, TY2025 MFJ solver
Includes CTC $4,400/yr (TY2025 federal credits, MFJ).
Note: USDA family-of-4 food plan uses children ages 6–8 and 9–11; childcare modeled at ages 4 and 8. Small ~5% age-band inconsistency documented in methodology.
Component grains range from ZIP or county (housing, per HUD SAFMR/FMR coverage) to national (CEX-based rows adjusted to state price level via BEA Regional Price Parities). Childcare: county-grain DOL NDCP 2022, inflated by BLS CPI Child Care subindex (factor 1.2293, Jan 2022 → Apr 2026). Local income tax modeled for ~3,100+ jurisdictions in 16 states. Not a recommended salary; not a poverty threshold; components are not weighted into a composite score. See household budget methodology, family-of-four methodology, and local income tax methodology.
Source detail
Cost-of-living and household budget context
Source agency
Every City In The USA (derived from federal primary sources)
Dataset
Every City — Monthly Household Budget Composite (derived)
Vintage / period
Derived · updated after each upstream refresh
Native geography
Mixed public-source grain: city, county, metro, ZIP/FMR area, state, regional, and national inputs.
Transformation
Every City attaches documented source layers to a city and computes budget components; it does not publish one universal cost score.
Known limit: Benchmark context, not a salary recommendation, policy threshold, or city-precise price index.
Bridgeport's closest published peers by population — same-state first, then nearest nationwide (fallback cohort; a full size, region, and cost-of-living model is planned).
Headline figures: BEA Regional Price Parities 2024 and the family-of-four Monthly Household Budget Benchmark. Build a full side-by-side on Compare cost of living.
Methodology
How these figures are computed.
Every figure on this page comes from a primary federal source. No composite index is produced; figures are presented per-component with grain labels so readers can trace each number to its source.