Slovenia · Cost of Living

Cheaper than home.
Not cheap.

Slovenia's price level runs 10% below the EU average — noticeably cheaper than the US or Canada for healthcare and services, close to parity on groceries. Here's the honest budget, built from official data where it exists and labelled estimates where it doesn't.

Figures verified 9 July 2026
The key numbers · 2026
  • Overall price level: 90% of the EU-27 average for household consumption (Eurostat, 2024 data)
  • Food and non-alcoholic drinks: roughly equal to the EU average (SURS/Eurostat) — groceries are not the bargain here; services are
  • Average net salary: €1,678.81/month (SURS, March 2026) · minimum wage 2026: €1,481.88 gross (≈€1,000 net)
  • Inflation: 2.4% average in 2025 (SURS); December 2025 year-on-year was 2.7%
  • Compulsory health contribution: €39.36/month per adult — your entire routine health insurance cost once enrolled
  • Ljubljana 1-bed rent: ~€750–1,250/month (early 2026, market estimate)

The context that makes the numbers make sense

Slovenia is the richest of the ex-Yugoslav states and prices accordingly — this is not Balkan-cheap, and anyone promising you €1,200/month living is selling something. What moves the needle against a US or Canadian budget: healthcare that costs €39.36 a month instead of four figures, no car-dependence in the cities, and services (haircuts, trades, restaurants outside tourist zones) priced for local salaries averaging €1,679 net. What doesn't: groceries at EU-average prices, fuel taxed like everywhere in Europe, and Ljubljana rents that have been climbing hard.

A realistic monthly budget for a couple

ItemLjubljanaMaribor / smaller towns
Rent, 2-bed~€1,350~€600–750
Utilities + internet~€250–350~€220–300
Groceries~€500–600~€450–550
Health contributions (2 × OZP)€78.72€78.72
Transport, eating out, extras~€400–600~€300–450
Total~€2,600–3,000~€1,650–2,150

Rent and spending lines are editorial estimates from early-2026 market data, not official statistics — Slovenia publishes no INE-style rent index. The OZP line is official (ZZZS). At €1 ≈ $1.14 (July 2026), the small-town budget is roughly $1,900–2,450/month.

Winter is a line item. Continental Slovenia heats seriously from November to March — budget for it, especially in older houses in the interior. The coast is milder; Ljubljana sits in a fog basin that surprises people who scouted in June.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

The grocery basket, priced

A real weekly shop in Ljubljana vs Maribor vs the coast, receipts included.

Coming soon

Utilities in detail

Electricity, gas, heating oil, water, and internet — providers and real bills through a winter.

Coming soon

Slovenia vs Portugal vs Croatia

The same retirement budget run through three countries, line by line.

Sources

  1. Price level 90% of EU-27 average (2024): Eurostat, Household consumption price levels (19 Jun 2025)
  2. Food prices at the EU average: SURS news release
  3. Average salary March 2026 (net €1,678.81, gross €2,678.28): SURS, stat.si
  4. 2026 minimum wage €1,481.88 gross: Uradni list RS (30 Jan 2026); KPMG Flash Alert 2026-050
  5. 2025 average inflation 2.4% (Dec 2025 y/y 2.7%): SURS news release
  6. OZP €39.36/month: ZZZS
  7. Rent ranges: early-2026 market analyses — estimates, not statistics
Budgets vary with lifestyle. Treat the table as a planning floor, verify rents against live listings, and add a margin for the exchange rate.
Vetted under the hood — free referral

Need a relocation specialist?

From first visa question to keys-in-hand — tell us where you are in the move to Slovenia and we'll answer, or introduce a specialist we've independently vetted.

Get matched — free Ask us anything
The Unlock — free weekly email

Real cost data, not YouTube optimism.

SURS releases, Eurostat comparisons, exchange-rate reality checks — the numbers that affect your budget, once a week. Unsubscribe anytime.