Is Pittsburgh A Good Place To Live

RELOCATION GUIDE

Is Pittsburgh A Good Place To Live? An Honest 2026 Guide

Cost of living, jobs, neighborhoods, weather, schools, safety — a Pittsburgh native real estate team’s unfiltered take on what it’s actually like to live in the Steel City.

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Last Updated: April 21, 2026  •  15 min read
In This Guide

Table of Contents

Section 01

The short answer: yes, with caveats

If you’re asking is Pittsburgh a good place to live, the honest, lived-in answer from a real estate team that has helped thousands of families move into and out of the city: yes, for the right person. Pittsburgh consistently lands in the top 25 of national livability rankings, ranks among the most affordable mid-sized metros in the country, and offers a quality of life that punches well above its weight class. It is also a city of microclimates, neighborhoods that feel like distinct small towns, and weather that will test you for four months of the year.

U.S. News ranked Pittsburgh among the top 100 best places to live in the U.S. for 2026, and it has appeared on Livability.com’s lists of best places for young professionals, families, and remote workers in each of the last several years. Money, Forbes, and Niche have all spotlighted Pittsburgh’s combination of affordability and amenity. The Greater Pittsburgh metro is home to roughly 2.4 million people across Allegheny, Westmoreland, Washington, Beaver, Armstrong, Butler, and Fayette counties.

Key Takeaway
Pittsburgh punches above its weight on three things almost everyone notices in the first month: housing affordability, walkable urban neighborhoods that don’t require a car, and an unusually deep stack of healthcare and education jobs. The trade-offs are gray winters, hilly geography that makes mapping deceiving, and a tax structure that surprises new arrivals.

This guide won’t sugarcoat. We’ll break down the real cost of living, the actual job market beyond the marketing slides, the personality of each neighborhood you’ll consider, and the deal-breakers that send some new arrivals back to the coasts within 18 months.

Section 02

Cost of living in Pittsburgh

This is the headline answer for most relocating families: Pittsburgh is meaningfully cheaper than nearly every East Coast or West Coast metro of comparable amenity. The composite cost of living index sits at roughly 89 against a national average of 100. Housing is the standout — about 20–25% below the national average and 50–70% below New York, Boston, DC, or San Francisco.

Median home prices, Greater Pittsburgh (2026)

Area Median Sale Price Median $/sq ft YoY Change
Allegheny County overall $248,000 $165 +3.4%
City of Pittsburgh $235,000 $184 +2.1%
Mt. Lebanon $435,000 $215 +5.0%
Cranberry Twp. $485,000 $210 +4.6%
Fox Chapel area $725,000 $240 +3.2%
Squirrel Hill $485,000 $240 +1.8%
Lawrenceville $385,000 $295 +2.7%
Mt. Washington $305,000 $208 +4.1%

Compared to a starter home in Boston or Brooklyn at $750K–$1.2M, Pittsburgh’s $235K median feels like a different planet. A six-figure software job that would qualify you for a one-bedroom condo in Cambridge buys a four-bedroom Victorian with a yard in Regent Square here.

Other cost-of-living anchors

  • Groceries: within 1–3% of national average
  • Utilities: 2–5% below national average; natural gas is cheap thanks to Marcellus Shale
  • Transportation: 8–10% below national average if you own a car; very competitive if you live in a walkable neighborhood
  • Healthcare: roughly at the national average — but with UPMC, AHN, and dozens of specialty providers nearby
  • Income tax: PA flat 3.07% state tax + 1–3% local Earned Income Tax
  • Property tax: meaningfully higher than national average; see our Allegheny County property tax guide
Key Takeaway
The catch in Pittsburgh’s cost-of-living math is property tax and the local Earned Income Tax. Both are easy to miss in spreadsheet comparisons. Your post-tax housing cost is still a steal vs. coastal cities — just don’t model only the mortgage.
Is Pittsburgh a good place to live Duquesne Incline Mt Washington
Section 03

Pittsburgh jobs & the post-industrial economy

Yes, this was Steel City. No, it isn’t anymore. Pittsburgh’s largest private employer is now UPMC, the integrated healthcare and insurance system that employs over 90,000 people regionally. The University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University combined add another 25,000+ jobs and feed a robust startup pipeline. PNC Financial Services, BNY Mellon, Highmark Health, and Allegheny Health Network round out the top employer list.

Where the jobs actually are

  • Healthcare & life sciences: UPMC, AHN, dozens of specialty hospitals and biotech firms anchored around Oakland and the South Side
  • Education: Pitt, CMU, Duquesne, Carlow, Point Park, Robert Morris, Chatham, Community College of Allegheny County
  • Financial services: PNC, BNY Mellon, Federated Hermes, Dollar Bank
  • Tech & robotics: Aurora, Argo AI alumni, Duolingo, Astrobotic, Locomation, Carnegie Robotics, Google Pittsburgh, Meta engineering
  • Energy: EQT, Range Resources, CNX, plus a growing hydrogen hub initiative
  • Manufacturing & advanced materials: still substantial, with U.S. Steel, Alcoa, PPG, Howmet legacy

Median household income in Pittsburgh is roughly $66,000 — meaningfully below national-average tech-hub cities, but the cost-of-living adjustment usually flips the math in Pittsburgh’s favor. A $110K Pittsburgh tech salary delivers comparable lifestyle to about $185K–$210K in Seattle or Boston after housing.

The remote-worker effect

Since 2020, Pittsburgh has been a major beneficiary of remote-work migration. We’ve personally helped hundreds of buyers move here from NYC, DC, Boston, San Francisco, and Austin while keeping their existing employer. The combination of housing affordability, walkable neighborhoods, and direct flights from PIT (Pittsburgh International Airport offers nonstops to roughly 60 destinations including London, Reykjavík, and most major U.S. hubs) makes it one of the country’s strongest remote-work landing pads.

Section 04

The neighborhoods that define Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh has 90 official city neighborhoods plus dozens of suburban municipalities, each with a distinct personality. You can’t really evaluate is Pittsburgh a good place to live without picking the right neighborhood — there’s a difference of an entire lifestyle between Lawrenceville and Sewickley.

Walkable urban favorites

  • Lawrenceville: trendy, restaurant-dense, Victorian rowhouses, young professional magnet, 36th–45th Streets are the heart
  • Squirrel Hill: family-oriented, incredibly walkable, exceptional schools (PPS Allderdice + day schools), large Jewish community, Forbes & Murray business district
  • Shadyside: upscale, Walnut Street shopping, leafy, near CMU/Pitt — popular with young professionals and grad students
  • Mt. Washington: postcard skyline views, hilly streets, walkable to the Inclines and downtown
  • Strip District / Lower Lawrenceville: warehouse-loft energy, food market culture, fast-changing condo and townhouse market

Family-focused suburbs

  • Mt. Lebanon: top-rated schools, walkable downtown along Washington Road, traditional architecture, T (light rail) access into the city
  • Upper St. Clair: top-rated schools, larger lots, classic suburban
  • Fox Chapel area: wooded, prestigious, large lots, top schools, country-club community
  • Cranberry Twp.: newer construction, family-heavy, in Butler County so different tax structure
  • North Allegheny / Wexford: top schools, newer subdivisions, easy I-79 commute

Up-and-coming value picks

  • Brookline: classic Pittsburgh affordability with strong neighborhood character
  • Bloomfield: Pittsburgh’s “Little Italy,” walkable, restaurant-dense, just east of Lawrenceville
  • Regent Square: small, walkable, indie shops, near Frick Park
  • Aspinwall: small-town vibe along the Allegheny River, walkable downtown, top Fox Chapel schools
Key Takeaway
Don’t judge a Pittsburgh neighborhood by a Zillow drive-by. Topography matters more here than in any other major U.S. city. A house “two blocks” from a transit stop might involve climbing a 200-step public stairway. Always walk a neighborhood before buying.

Considering a move to Pittsburgh?

We help relocating families decide which neighborhood actually fits — based on commute, schools, lifestyle, and budget. Free 30-minute relocation call.

Schedule a Relocation Call

Section 05

Schools & raising a family

Pittsburgh’s school landscape is split into two very different stories. Inside the city, Pittsburgh Public Schools serves about 18,000 students across 54 schools. The district is uneven — some standouts (Allderdice, CAPA, Sci-Tech Academy) compete nationally; others struggle. Many city families either stay in PPS for elite magnets or shift to private/parochial.

Outside the city, the Western PA suburbs include some of the strongest public school districts in Pennsylvania. Mt. Lebanon, Upper St. Clair, Fox Chapel Area, North Allegheny, Pine-Richland, Hampton, and Quaker Valley regularly rank in the state’s top 25.

Notable private/parochial options

  • Shady Side Academy (PK–12, multiple campuses) — large endowment, strong arts/STEM
  • Winchester Thurston (PK–12, Shadyside)
  • Sewickley Academy (PK–12)
  • The Ellis School (girls, PK–12, Shadyside)
  • Central Catholic / Oakland Catholic (single-sex Catholic high schools)
  • St. Edmund’s Academy (PK–8, Squirrel Hill)

Family quality of life beyond schools

Pittsburgh has an exceptional density of family-friendly assets per capita: the Carnegie Museums (Natural History + Art + Science Center), the Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium, the National Aviary, Phipps Conservatory, Kennywood Park, dozens of city playgrounds, the new Frick Environmental Center, and a parks system anchored by Frick, Schenley, Highland, and Riverview parks. Most of these are either free, deeply subsidized, or covered by a single museum membership.

Key Takeaway
Two clarifying questions almost every relocating family asks us: “public or private?” and “city or suburb?” There’s no universal right answer. The framework we use: optimize for a 20-minute commute to work + a school environment your kid will actually thrive in + walkability if you value it. The order matters.
Is Pittsburgh a good place to live Roberto Clemente Bridge downtown
Section 06

Weather, geography & getting around

Let’s address the biggest pushback we hear from people considering Pittsburgh: the weather. Pittsburgh sees roughly 165 sunny days per year, well below the national average of 205. November through February is genuinely gray. Winters are not as harsh as Buffalo or Minneapolis — average winter temperatures sit in the high 20s to high 30s — but the lack of sun is a real adjustment, especially for folks coming from Florida, California, or the Mountain West.

What the weather actually looks like

Season Avg High Avg Low Notes
Winter (Dec–Feb) 38°F 24°F Snow days, gray sky, plenty of slush
Spring (Mar–May) 60°F 41°F Wet, transitional, beautiful by May
Summer (Jun–Aug) 82°F 62°F Warm humid, occasional 90°F+ stretches
Fall (Sep–Nov) 64°F 45°F The best season — long, colorful, dry

Geography that surprises newcomers

Pittsburgh is not flat. The city sits at the confluence of the Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio rivers, and the topography is a maze of hills, valleys, hollows, and bridges. There are 446 bridges within city limits — more than any other city in the world. Tunnels and bridges create real bottlenecks at rush hour, and the Fort Pitt Tunnel into downtown is a daily ritual for many commuters.

Getting around

  • Driving: required for most suburbs; congestion is moderate compared to NYC or DC
  • Transit: Pittsburgh Regional Transit runs buses + the T (light rail) into the South Hills and Downtown; reasonable for commuters from Mt. Lebanon, Dormont, South Side
  • Walkability: excellent in Lawrenceville, Squirrel Hill, Shadyside, South Side, Mt. Washington, Bloomfield, Regent Square
  • Cycling: growing network including the Three Rivers Heritage Trail and Eliza Furnace Trail
  • Air: Pittsburgh International (PIT) — direct flights to 60+ destinations, low fares historically, easy 25-minute drive from downtown
Section 07

Safety, crime & quality of life

Pittsburgh’s metro overall crime rate is roughly comparable to other mid-sized American cities. The city itself trends slightly above the national average for property crime and slightly above for violent crime — but, critically, those numbers are driven heavily by a handful of specific neighborhoods. Most of the residential areas where buyers actually want to live (Squirrel Hill, Mt. Lebanon, Fox Chapel, Shadyside, Mt. Washington, Cranberry, Sewickley) have crime rates well below the national average.

What residents say in surveys

  • High satisfaction with neighborhood safety (Squirrel Hill, Mt. Lebanon, Upper St. Clair routinely rank top of regional safety surveys)
  • High satisfaction with healthcare access (UPMC + AHN density)
  • Very high satisfaction with cultural amenities relative to city size (Pittsburgh Symphony, Pittsburgh Opera, Cultural District, Carnegie Museums)
  • Moderate satisfaction with public schools — varies dramatically by district
  • Very high satisfaction with restaurant scene — Pittsburgh has been a James Beard finalist city repeatedly in the last decade
Key Takeaway
Almost everyone we’ve helped move to Pittsburgh from a coastal city says the same thing six months in: “I didn’t expect this much community.” The regional culture is unusually friendly, neighbors actually know each other, and you’ll find yourself invited to Steelers tailgates by people you met at a coffee shop.

Ready to see Pittsburgh in person?

We’ll plan a one-day neighborhood tour: 4–6 areas, lunch in the Strip, market context for each. No pressure, no pitch.

Plan My Pittsburgh Tour

Section 08

Who Pittsburgh is — and isn’t — for

Pittsburgh is a strong fit if you…

  • Want a real urban neighborhood without paying coastal-city prices
  • Are a remote worker who wants a four-bedroom house with a yard for under $400K
  • Have a job in healthcare, higher education, finance, or tech — Pittsburgh’s strongest sectors
  • Want walkability + a yard + a top-25 public school in the same package (Mt. Lebanon, Upper St. Clair, Fox Chapel)
  • Value four real seasons and don’t mind cloudy winters
  • Care about food scene, museums, and pro sports without the cost of NYC or LA
  • Are starting or growing a family and want quality healthcare, parks, and museums in walking distance

Pittsburgh is probably NOT for you if you…

  • Need 250+ sunny days per year — winter is real here
  • Want flat, drivable suburbs with no hills (try Cranberry or parts of Wexford if so)
  • Need a 24-hour subway or 5-minute Uber availability everywhere — Pittsburgh isn’t Manhattan
  • Are looking for an extremely large, fast-growing tech labor market — Pittsburgh’s tech scene is excellent but mid-sized
  • Want extremely low property taxes — Pittsburgh’s structure rewards low purchase prices but the millage is meaningful
Key Takeaway
The honest verdict: Pittsburgh delivers an unusually high ratio of urban quality of life to cost. For families, remote workers, and anyone in healthcare, education, or tech who wants their dollar to stretch, it’s one of the best values in the United States right now.
Pittsburgh good place to live three rivers neighborhoods
Frequently Asked Questions

Is Pittsburgh a good place to live FAQ

Is Pittsburgh affordable to live in?
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Yes. Pittsburgh’s overall cost-of-living index is roughly 89 vs. a national average of 100, with housing being the standout. Median home price in Allegheny County sits around $248,000 — meaningfully below most major East and West Coast metros.
What are the safest neighborhoods in Pittsburgh?
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Squirrel Hill, Mt. Lebanon, Upper St. Clair, Fox Chapel, Sewickley, Cranberry Township, Shadyside, Mt. Washington, and most of the South Hills regularly score well above national averages on neighborhood safety surveys.
How is the weather in Pittsburgh, really?
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Pittsburgh has all four seasons. Summers are warm and humid with occasional 90°F+ stretches. Winters are gray with regular snow and average highs around 38°F. Fall is the best season — long, dry, and colorful. Cloudy winters are a real adjustment for newcomers from sunnier climates.
Is Pittsburgh a good place to raise a family?
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Yes for families that prioritize school quality, walkability, and parks. Top-tier school districts (Mt. Lebanon, Upper St. Clair, Fox Chapel, North Allegheny, Pine-Richland, Quaker Valley) combine with an unusual density of museums, parks, and family-friendly amenities for a city of Pittsburgh’s size.
What jobs are available in Pittsburgh?
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Pittsburgh’s economy is anchored by healthcare (UPMC, AHN), higher education (Pitt, CMU, Duquesne), finance (PNC, BNY Mellon), tech and robotics (Duolingo, Aurora, Astrobotic, Google Pittsburgh, Meta engineering), and energy. It is also one of the top remote-work destinations in the country.
How does Pittsburgh compare to Cleveland, Cincinnati, or Columbus?
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Pittsburgh has stronger walkable urban neighborhoods than Cleveland or Columbus, comparable affordability, and deeper anchor employers in healthcare and higher education. Columbus has more population growth; Cincinnati has a flatter geography. Pittsburgh wins on neighborhood character and food/culture per capita.
Are property taxes in Pittsburgh high?
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Property taxes vary widely by municipality and school district. The City of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh Public Schools) has a relatively moderate combined millage of about 23 mills. Top suburbs like Mt. Lebanon and Upper St. Clair are 32–36 mills. See our full Allegheny County property tax guide for examples.
Is Pittsburgh growing or shrinking?
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The City of Pittsburgh proper has lost population for decades but is now flat-to-modestly-growing in core neighborhoods. The seven-county metro has stabilized around 2.4 million and is gaining net inbound migration thanks to remote work and healthcare/tech anchors.
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Disclaimer: The information on this page is for educational purposes and reflects general market conditions in Western Pennsylvania as of April 2026. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Property tax laws, millage rates, assessment ratios, and market conditions change. Consult a licensed Pennsylvania attorney, CPA, or qualified real estate professional for guidance specific to your situation. The Marzullo Team at Compass RE makes no warranty regarding the accuracy of third-party data referenced herein.
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Compass RE Pittsburgh
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Pittsburgh, PA 15232
(412) 222-0198
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