Landscape view of Alaska

Cities in Alaska

Browse cities, counties, and salary scenarios across Alaska.

Use this page to browse cities in Alaska, compare county options, and open salary scenarios without jumping across multiple directories.

Is Alaska affordable?

Alaska reads as a mid-range state in our city sample. On a $70,000 income, Anchorage municipality currently shows the lowest modeled rent pressure in this state.

Most useful for relocation planning and shortlisting cities before opening full city pages.

Cities

State salary scenarios: Living on $30k · Living on $40k · Living on $50k · Living on $60k · Living on $70k

Find a county in Alaska

Showing 8 counties

Aleutians East Borough CountyAleutians West Census Area CountyAnchorage Municipality CountyBethel Census Area CountyBristol Bay Borough CountyChugach Census Area CountyCopper River Census Area CountyDenali Borough County

5-second example for $70,000

On 70,000/yr, median rent in Anchorage municipality, Alaska is about 23.67% of gross and falls in the “Very affordable” bucket. In the model’s monthly estimate, the biggest budget driver is Rent (housing). Compared with the local median household income, this salary is below. In this area (mid-range), the model’s rent math puts housing in a “Comfortable” bucket: rent looks comparatively manageable and rent (housing) is the main lever in the estimates.

Take-home (est.)
4,516/mo
Median rent (midpoint)
$1,381/mo
Rent affordability ceiling
1,750/mo
Remaining after typical costs
1,485.5/mo

Cost-of-living tier: moderate

What drives the budget here?

This area is generally mid-range based on a cost-of-living index of 100 (U.S. average = 100). Typical rent-to-gross is in the Comfortable range (using the page’s rent and income inputs).

In the site’s estimated monthly breakdown, the largest category is Rent (housing) (1,380.5/mo), so that’s the biggest lever for moving the overall budget up or down.

Practical next steps

  • Rent looks comparatively manageable for the typical household. Your biggest wins usually come from planning for the non-housing categories (utilities, groceries, etc.) so totals stay predictable.
  • In this area, the modeled rent target is reachable at (or below) the local median income level.

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