Living Cost Compare
Nebraska

1 cities tracked

$984median 1BR

vs
New Mexico

1 cities tracked

$889median 1BR

Median one-bedroom rent across the cities we track is $984 in Nebraska versus $889 in New Mexico. Overall, New Mexico runs roughly 10% cheaper on rent than Nebraska, its main day-to-day cost driver.

Median household income across tracked cities is $72,708 in Nebraska and $65,604 in New Mexico — about 10% higher in Nebraska. Nebraska has a top state income tax rate of 4.55% and a 5.5% state sales tax; New Mexico has a top state income tax rate of 5.90% and a 4.875% state sales tax.

State Taxes

Sales Tax
5.5%
4.875%
+0.6 pp in Nebraska
Income Tax (top rate)
4.55%
5.90%
+1.4 pp in New Mexico

Housing (median across tracked cities)

Median 1BR Rent
$984
$889
+10% in Nebraska
Median Home Value
$230,100
$266,700
+16% in New Mexico

Income (median across tracked cities)

Median Household Income
$72,708
$65,604
+10% in Nebraska

Climate (median across tracked cities)

Avg Annual Temperature
51.1°F
57.2°F
+6.1°F in New Mexico

Nebraska vs New Mexico — FAQ

Is it cheaper to live in Nebraska or New Mexico?
New Mexico is cheaper on rent — its median one-bedroom of $889 runs about 10% below Nebraska's $984, based on the cities we track in each state.
How much more do you need to earn to live in Nebraska than in New Mexico?
To keep rent near the recommended 30% of gross income, based on median rent across tracked cities, you'd want to earn roughly $39,000 a year in Nebraska versus $36,000 in New Mexico.
Which has lower taxes, Nebraska or New Mexico?
Nebraska has a top state income tax rate of 4.55% and a 5.5% state sales tax. New Mexico has a top state income tax rate of 5.90% and a 4.875% state sales tax.

Housing, income, and climate are medians across the 1/1 cities we track in Nebraska/New Mexico — not population-weighted statewide figures. Taxes are exact state-level rates. Sources: US Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year; NOAA Climate Normals 1981–2010; Tax Foundation 2026.