Oslo tops list as world’s most expensive city
Eight of top 10 located in Europe; N.Y. doesn't even break top 25
![]() | Tourists snap photographs in front the Eiffel Tower in this file photo. Paris is No. 2 on the list of most expensive cities, trailing only Oslo, Norway. |
Thomas Coex / AFP - Getty Images |
NEW YORK - Planning a European summer vacation? Save your money.
Eight of the ten costliest cities worldwide are located in Europe, according to a recent survey from The Economist Group.
Oslo, Norway topped the list of the most expensive, followed by Paris, Copenhagen, Denmark and London. Two Japanese cities broke into the top ten: Tokyo — which claimed the top spot in 2005 and came in second last year — at fifth and Osaka Kobe at sixth.
Reykjavik, Iceland; Zurich, Switzerland; Frankfurt, Germany and Helsinki, Finland rounded out the ten.
“The strength of European currencies plays a large part,” in unseating Tokyo from the top five, said Jon Copestake, the survey’s editor. “But prices in Europe are also rising whereas those in Japan have been almost static.”
Still dreaming of that trip to Europe? Consider the cheaper European capitals of Greece (Athens tied at No. 55), the Czech Republic (Prague tied at No. 55), Portugal (Lisbon at No. 59), and Poland (Warsaw at No. 63).
It may be an even better idea to stay close to home. The falling dollar and declining inflation made the United States affordable, even for a penny-pincher. New York, the most expensive U.S. city, didn’t show up on the list until No. 28. Chicago followed at No. 36 and Los Angeles at No. 41.
Atlanta claimed the title of cheapest U.S. city at No. 84.
The region of the world that offers the most bang for a dollar is Latin America, which accounts for a quarter of the cheapest 30 cities.
Africa and the Middle East also were home to inexpensive destinations. Except for Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire and Tel Aviv, Israel, cities in these regions were absent from the costliest 50.
The Economist Intelligence Unit survey compared prices and products in more than 130 cities worldwide and used New York as a base index of 100 for comparisons.
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