Quick answer
The average 1-bedroom rent in Richmond is $1,320/month and the median home price is $330K. Monthly utilities average $145 and groceries run about $345/month per person.
City Guide · VA
Cost of Living in Richmond, VA (2026)
Richmond has developed one of the most impressive food and craft beer scenes of any mid-sized American city. Scott's Addition — a former industrial district — has been converted into a brewery and distillery corridor with 20+ craft breweries within walking distance: The Veil, Ardent Craft Ales, Hardywood, Isley Brewing, and Stone Brewing's East Coast facility, among others. The restaurant scene has national recognition: Brenner Pass, Brenner Pass, Metzger Bar & Butchery, Longoven, and The Roosevelt have put Richmond on the culinary map. Capital One — the 10th-largest US bank by assets — is headquartered in suburban McLean but has major Richmond operations (20,000+ employees in the metro). CarMax, MeadWestvaco, and a cluster of insurance and financial services companies round out the corporate base.
The outdoor access is genuinely exceptional for a city of 230,000. Class III–IV whitewater rapids on the James River run directly through the city — Richmond has more urban whitewater than any city in the US, and local kayakers and rafters use it year-round. The Virginia Capital Trail is a 52-mile dedicated bike path from Richmond to Williamsburg. Belle Isle sits in the middle of the James with granite outcroppings for sunbathing and bouldering. Shenandoah National Park is 2 hours west. The Blue Ridge Parkway, Appalachian Trail, and Virginia Beach are all within 2–3 hours. For outdoor-oriented urban professionals, Richmond delivers in ways that much larger cities with similar price points don't.
The neighborhoods have distinct identities. The Fan (named for the radiating street pattern) is the most desirable in-city neighborhood — Victorian row houses, bars, VCU campus energy, and Carytown's independent retail district running through it. Scott's Addition is the young professional brewery hub. Church Hill, the oldest neighborhood in Richmond, has panoramic views of the downtown skyline and is gentrifying. Manchester, south of the James, is the emerging neighborhood where artists and young professionals are driving rapid price appreciation. The honest limitations: Richmond summers are hot and humid (90°F+ June–September), the job market depth outside finance and healthcare is limited, and Virginia state income tax at 5.75% is meaningful. But at $1,320/month for a 1BR — less than half of DC prices — the value case is compelling for anyone who can work remotely or at Capital One.
Last updated: April 23, 2026
Richmond Cost of Living at a Glance
1BR Monthly Rent
$1,320
avg/month
2BR Monthly Rent
$1,680
avg/month
Median Home Price
$330K
as of 2025
Avg Utilities
$145
per month
Avg Groceries
$345
per person/month
Walk Score
51/100
Transit: 37/100
Compared to US national average
1BR rent: -12% vs. national avg ($1,500)
Home price: -21% vs. national avg ($420K)
Best Neighborhoods in Richmond
The Fan / Carytown
Victorian row houses, VCU energy, independent retail, most desirable; 1BR $1,300–1,700
Scott's Addition
20+ breweries, converted warehouses, restaurants, young professionals; 1BR $1,300–1,800
Church Hill
Historic, panoramic downtown views, gentrifying, artists, oldest neighborhood; 1BR $1,100–1,500
Manchester (South Side)
Emerging arts district, James River access, rapidly appreciating, raw; 1BR $1,100–1,500
Museum District
Museums, Monument Ave, quieter residential, families; 1BR $1,200–1,600
Henrico County (Short Pump)
Western suburbs, Capital One campus area, top schools, newer construction; 1BR $1,200–1,600
Chesterfield County
Southern suburbs, safe, family-oriented, more affordable, car-dependent; 1BR $1,000–1,400
What Nobody Tells You About Richmond
Real trade-offs that most city guides gloss over. Know these before you sign a lease.
Summer heat and humidity June–September is significant. Richmond averages 89–91°F in July with high humidity — comparable to DC. Heat index regularly hits 100°F+.
Virginia state income tax at 5.75% is meaningful and higher than some competing Southern states (NC is 4.75%, TN has no income tax).
Job market outside Capital One, healthcare, and VCU/government is limited. Tech and startup depth is still developing. Career ceiling is lower than DC.
Car dependency in most of the metro. Richmond has some walkable neighborhoods (Fan, Scott's Addition, Carytown) but suburbs require driving for everything.
Some neighborhoods have significant crime disparities. Certain east Richmond areas have elevated crime rates compared to the Fan and western suburbs.
DC is close enough to be a cultural reference but far enough (2.5 hours Amtrak) that it's not practical for daily commuting. Remote workers who occasionally need DC find this acceptable; daily DC commuters do not.
Monument Avenue's Confederate statue removal created civic controversy that lingered. The street itself is beautiful (wide boulevard, historic architecture) but the debate reflects ongoing racial equity tensions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Richmond compare to DC for cost?
Dramatically cheaper. $1,320 vs $2,400+ for 1BR in DC. Richmond to DC on Amtrak is 2.5 hours ($30–50 each way). Many remote workers who occasionally need DC live in Richmond and commute a few times per month. The food and brewery scene at Richmond prices is significantly better value than DC equivalents.
What outdoor activities are available in Richmond?
Class III–IV rapids on the James River run through downtown — Richmond has more urban whitewater than any other US city. Belle Isle and Browns Island provide swimming and bouldering. The Capital Trail is a 52-mile dedicated bike path to Williamsburg. Shenandoah National Park is 2 hours west. Virginia Beach is 2 hours east. Appalachian Trail access is 90 minutes west. For a city of 230,000, the outdoor options are genuinely exceptional.
What is Scott's Addition?
A former industrial district converted into Richmond's brewery and creative hub. 20+ craft breweries within a few blocks including The Veil (nationally recognized), Ardent Craft Ales, Isley Brewing, Hardywood Park, and Stone Brewing's East Coast facility. Also distilleries (Reservoir, KO Distilling), restaurants, and an increasingly residential population. It's become one of the best brewery districts in the US — walkable, concentrated, and with genuinely good beer.
Is Richmond good for young professionals?
Excellent value. Scott's Addition and The Fan have the social infrastructure of cities three times larger at fraction of the price. Capital One employs 20,000+ and is a serious career launcher for finance and tech professionals. VCU keeps the city demographically young. The outdoor access (James River, hiking proximity) appeals to active people. The main limitation is that career ceilings in most fields are lower than DC or Charlotte.
How is the Richmond food scene?
Nationally recognized and improving. Longoven has been on best-new-restaurant lists. The Roosevelt and Brenner Pass are excellent. Metzger Bar & Butchery gets James Beard attention. The culinary scene around Carytown, Church Hill, and Scott's Addition has genuine depth beyond chains. The combination of farm-to-table sourcing (Virginia has excellent seafood, produce, and dairy), craft beer culture, and low rent enabling risk-taking by restaurateurs has made Richmond a food destination.
Explore Richmond further
Compare Richmond to other cities
Can you afford Richmond?
Ready to make Richmond feel like home?
Browse cozy interior ideas to make your new place feel cozy from day one.