Lifestyle ranking
Best Cities for Remote Workers (2026)
Where remote tech workers get the best lifestyle for their salary.
Rankings last updated: April 2026 · Based on verified salary and cost data from 20 cities
#1 City
Berlin
Top Score
100.0
Cities Ranked
20
Avg Score
75.5
Remote work has fundamentally changed the calculus of where to live. When your salary isn't tied to your location — or when it's only partially adjusted — the smartest move is often to live somewhere that maximizes what your money buys. The best cities for remote workers combine low costs, reliable infrastructure, and enough culture and community to avoid isolation.
This ranking uses five factors: inverted cost of living (30%), purchasing power (20%), tech hub score (20%), inverted 1BR rent (15%), and inverted transport cost (15%). The cost-heavy weighting reflects the core remote worker advantage — earning a strong salary while living affordably — while the tech hub score ensures recommended cities have coworking spaces and tech communities.
Transport costs matter even for remote workers. Most still commute to coworking spaces, coffee shops, or occasional in-person meetings, and affordable public transit makes a city more livable overall.
Complete Rankings: Best Cities for Remote Workers
🥇
Germany
$50,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 62
Berlin has a median tech salary of $50,000, with a relatively low cost of living (index: 62), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
100.0
/ 100
🥈
France
$48,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 73
Paris has a median tech salary of $48,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 73).
96.1
/ 100
🥉
Germany
$55,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 72
Munich has a median tech salary of $55,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 72).
93.5
/ 100
4
United States
$70,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 72
Austin has a median tech salary of $70,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 72), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
89.9
/ 100
5
Australia
$58,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 6/10
Cost of living index: 70
Melbourne has a median tech salary of $58,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 70).
89.2
/ 100
6
Netherlands
$52,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 72
Amsterdam has a median tech salary of $52,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 72), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
87.3
/ 100
7
United Arab Emirates
$60,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 72
Dubai has a median tech salary of $60,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 72).
82.1
/ 100
8
United States
$65,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 78
Chicago has a median tech salary of $65,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 78).
81.2
/ 100
9
Ireland
$55,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 76
Dublin has a median tech salary of $55,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 76), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
81.0
/ 100
10
Canada
$55,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 73
Vancouver has a median tech salary of $55,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 73).
80.7
/ 100
11
Canada
$58,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 75
Toronto has a median tech salary of $58,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 75).
77.5
/ 100
12
Singapore
$55,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 9/10
Cost of living index: 82
Singapore has a median tech salary of $55,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 82), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 9/10).
76.3
/ 100
13
Australia
$62,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 80
Sydney has a median tech salary of $62,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 80).
74.0
/ 100
14
United Kingdom
$52,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 9/10
Cost of living index: 85
London has a median tech salary of $52,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 85), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 9/10).
70.1
/ 100
15
United States
$82,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 9/10
Cost of living index: 88
Seattle has a median tech salary of $82,000, with a moderate cost of living (index: 88), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 9/10).
70.1
/ 100
16
United States
$68,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 90
Los Angeles has a median tech salary of $68,000, with a high cost of living (index: 90), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
63.1
/ 100
17
United States
$78,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 8/10
Cost of living index: 92
Boston has a median tech salary of $78,000, with a high cost of living (index: 92), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 8/10).
57.3
/ 100
18
Switzerland
$85,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 7/10
Cost of living index: 115
Zurich has a median tech salary of $85,000, with a high cost of living (index: 115).
56.2
/ 100
19
United States
$75,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 9/10
Cost of living index: 100
New York has a median tech salary of $75,000, with a high cost of living (index: 100), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 9/10).
45.0
/ 100
20
United States
$95,000 median tech salary
Tech hub score: 10/10
Cost of living index: 105
San Francisco has a median tech salary of $95,000, with a high cost of living (index: 105), and a thriving tech ecosystem (score: 10/10).
40.0
/ 100
Rankings by Region
How We Rank: Methodology
Five-factor scoring: inverted cost of living (30%), purchasing power (20%), tech hub score (20%), inverted 1BR rent (15%), inverted transport (15%).
cost of living (inverted)
purchasing power
tech hub score
rent (inverted)
transport (inverted)
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❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Berlin earned the top spot with a composite score of 100.0/100, reflecting its strong performance across all weighted metrics: cost of living (inverted), purchasing power, tech hub score, rent (inverted), transport (inverted). The city benefits from a well-developed tech ecosystem, competitive compensation packages, and a labor market that consistently attracts top talent. Our scoring methodology normalizes each metric to a 0–100 scale before applying weights, and Berlin excels in the factors that matter most for this category. That said, individual circumstances like visa eligibility, personal preferences, and remote work options can shift the ideal choice for any given professional.
Each city is scored using a weighted composite of real data points: cost of living (inverted), purchasing power, tech hub score, rent (inverted), transport (inverted). Every metric is normalized to a 0–100 scale based on the min and max values across all 20 cities in the dataset, ensuring a fair apples-to-apples comparison. For metrics where lower is better (such as cost of living or rent), the scale is inverted so that more affordable cities score higher. The final score is a weighted average reflecting the relative importance of each factor for this specific use case. We update the underlying data quarterly to keep rankings accurate.
The top 3 cities are: 1) Berlin (score: 100), 2) Paris (score: 96.1), and 3) Munich (score: 93.5). These cities consistently outperform others across all key metrics. The gap between #1 and #3 is often tighter than you'd expect, meaning any of these cities could be the best fit depending on your personal priorities and circumstances.
EU leads with 6 cities in the ranking, which reflects the region's concentration of tech industry investment and talent. However, cities in other regions often offer a compelling value proposition when cost of living is factored in — a lower nominal salary can translate to higher purchasing power in more affordable markets. Europe's strong worker protections and quality-of-life metrics make several European cities competitive, while Asia-Pacific cities are rapidly climbing thanks to booming tech sectors and growing startup ecosystems. The best region ultimately depends on whether you optimize for raw earnings, net savings, or lifestyle.
Absolutely. Remote workers can leverage these rankings to identify cities where their salary goes furthest — especially rankings that emphasize purchasing power, cost of living, and rent affordability. If your employer offers location-adjusted pay, the highest-ranked cities may shift depending on the adjustment formula. But if you earn a flat salary regardless of location, optimizing for lower-cost cities can dramatically increase your savings rate. Many of the cities in this ranking also have strong digital infrastructure, coworking spaces, and international expat communities that make remote work comfortable and productive. We recommend cross-referencing this ranking with our Remote Workers and Cost of Living rankings for a complete picture.
Cost of living is a critical factor because a high salary means little if everyday expenses consume the bulk of your income. We incorporate the cost of living index (benchmarked to New York City = 100), rent prices for 1-bedroom and 2-bedroom apartments, grocery costs, and public transport expenses. Cities with high nominal salaries but extreme living costs — like San Francisco or Zurich — may rank lower than mid-range salary cities with excellent affordability. Our purchasing power index captures this dynamic directly: it measures how much real goods and services your salary can buy in each location. For this specific ranking, cost of living carries a weight that reflects its importance relative to the primary metric — check the methodology section for exact weights.
For lifestyle-oriented rankings, we incorporate quality-of-life ratings and safety indices drawn from international surveys and government data. These metrics capture factors like healthcare access, infrastructure quality, personal safety, and overall livability. English proficiency is included for international relocation rankings because language barriers significantly impact daily life quality and professional networking. We also consider population size as a proxy for cultural diversity, entertainment options, and social opportunities — larger cities tend to offer more varied lifestyles. These softer metrics are weighted alongside hard economic data to produce rankings that reflect real-world livability, not just financial optimization.