Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

What A Furnished One-Bedroom Costs In 13 Latin American Cities (2026) The Rio Times


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Latin America · Cost of Living

Key Facts
    The benchmark. A furnished one-bedroom in an expat-favorite neighborhood, across 13 Latin American hubs. The cheap end. Oaxaca and Mérida in Mexico start near US$400–800 a month. The high end. São Paulo, Mexico City and beachy Playa del Carmen top the list, up to US$1,500–1,900. The catch.“Furnished” carries a premium, and short leases cost more than year-long local contracts. Budget wider. Rent is the anchor, but plan for US$1,100–3,500 a month all-in depending on the city.

Where does your money go furthest in Latin America? Here is what a furnished one-bedroom actually costs in 13 cities expats and nomads pick most - drawn from our live city data, ordered cheapest to priciest.

RTAsk Rio TimesHave a question about living in Latin America? Get a straight answer from our reporting asking → How to read these numbers

Each figure is the monthly rent for a furnished one-bedroom in a neighborhood expats actually pick - Roma Norte in Mexico City, Palermo in Buenos Aires, Botafogo in Rio. They are real market ranges, not the cheapest room you could possibly find.

“Furnished” matters, because it carries a premium of 20% or more over an empty local rental. Short, flexible leases also cost more than a standard year-long contract signed with a local guarantor.

Furnished one-bedroom, 13 cities Oaxaca, MexicoUS$400–750Comfortable month, all-in: US$1,600–2,400 Mérida, MexicoUS$500–800Bills often included · all-in: US$1,100–1,500 Medellín, ColombiaUS$500–1,200El Poblado · all-in: US$1,200–1,800 Santiago, ChileUS$550–900Providencia · all-in: US$1,200–2,000 Bogotá, ColombiaUS$550–1,300Furnished · all-in: US$1,200–2,850 Lima, PeruUS$600–900Barranco · all-in: US$1,300–1,600 Montevideo, UruguayUS$600–1,000Pocitos · all-in: US$1,500–2,200 Rio de Janeiro, BrazilUS$690–1,190Botafogo · all-in: about US$2,000 Florianópolis, BrazilUS$700–1,400All-in: US$1,250–2,000 Buenos Aires, ArgentinaUS$800–1,300Palermo · all-in: US$1,500–2,000 Mexico CityUS$800–1,500Roma Norte · all-in: US$1,800–3,500 Playa del Carmen, MexicoUS$900–1,400Near the beach · all-in: US$1,700–3,600 São Paulo, BrazilUS$950–1,900Condo fees included · all-in: US$1,800–2,500 Where your money stretches furthest

Mexico's secondary cities lead on value. Oaxaca and Mérida deliver a furnished one-bedroom for well under US$800, often with bills folded in, while keeping a strong café-and-culture scene.

The Andes are the other bargain belt: Medellín, Bogotá, Lima and Santiago all sit comfortably under US$1,300 at the furnished one-bedroom level. They pair low rents with big, established expat communities.

Where you'll pay up

The priciest hubs are the biggest economies and the beach towns. São Paulo, Mexico City and Playa del Carmen all push past US$1,400 for a furnished one-bedroom in the popular districts.

Brazil's big cities also bundle condo fees (condomínio) into the real monthly cost, which can add a few hundred dollars. Always ask whether a quoted rent includes condomínio and IPTU property tax before you sign.

Turn rent into a real budget

Rent is the anchor, but the full picture is wider. A comfortable month - rent, utilities, food, transport and some fun - runs from about US$1,100 in Mérida to US$3,500 in Mexico City's pricier corners.

Two quick rules save money everywhere: take a longer lease if you can, and view in person before paying. Furnished short-stay listings are convenient for landing, but a local annual contract is almost always cheaper once you settle.

Frequently Asked Questions Which Latin American city has the cheapest rent for expats?

Among popular hubs, Oaxaca and Mérida in Mexico are the most affordable, with furnished one-bedrooms starting near US$400–800 a month. Several Andean cities follow close behind.

Why are these rents higher than what locals pay?

These are furnished apartments in expat-favorite neighborhoods on flexible leases, which all carry a premium. An unfurnished, year-long local contract is typically cheaper.

What is a realistic total monthly budget?

Plan for roughly US$1,100 to US$3,500 all-in, depending on the city and your lifestyle. The lower end fits Mérida or Lima; the higher end reflects Mexico City and beach towns.

Do Brazilian rents include extra fees?

Often yes. In São Paulo and Rio, the real cost usually includes a monthly condomínio fee and IPTU property tax, so confirm what a quoted rent covers.

Where do the figures come from?

They are drawn from The Rio Times' live city data, reflecting current furnished one-bedroom ranges in the neighborhoods expats most often choose.

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