Exchange Coin

Cost of Living: Eurozone vs Japan

Which country is cheaper to live in — Eurozone or Japan? Below we compare seven everyday essentials side by side. Prices are indicative US-dollar equivalents for 2026; use the live tool to see them in each country’s own currency at today’s exchange rate.

Japan comes out about 22% cheaper overall — our seven-item basket costs roughly $1,142 there versus $1,464 in Eurozone.
Item Eurozone Japan
🍔 Big Mac$5.60$3.20
🍽️ Cheap meal out$16$8
🏢 Rent, 1-bed (centre) /mo$1,300$900
⛽ Petrol (1 litre)$1.92$1.15
🎟️ Transport pass /mo$60$130
🌐 Internet /mo$40$45
🏋️ Gym /mo$40$55

Green marks the cheaper option for each item. Figures are indicative US-dollar equivalents drawn from the Big Mac Index, GlobalPetrolPrices and Numbeo-referenced data — a starting point, not a substitute for local research.

See these prices in € and ¥, live → Open in Burgernomics

Living in Eurozone vs Japan: the bigger picture

Everyday costs in Eurozone and Japan differ because of local wages, taxes, property markets and how strong each currency is. A single “cost of living” number hides a lot — rent might be cheaper in one place while transport or eating out is cheaper in the other. That’s why comparing the specific things you actually buy, as above, beats any one index. To convert a salary or budget between the two, use our live EUR to JPY converter.

Frequently asked questions

Is Eurozone or Japan cheaper?

On our seven-item basket, Japan is about 22% cheaper than Eurozone — but check individual rows, as some items buck the overall trend.

Are these live prices?

The table uses indicative 2026 US-dollar figures so the comparison stays stable. For live, currency-converted prices, open the Burgernomics tool, which applies today’s exchange rate.

What about salaries?

Costs are only half the story — wages differ too. Read our explainer on purchasing power parity to compare living standards fairly.