Cost of Living in Jamaica 2026 (Real Numbers in USD)
A realistic breakdown of what it actually costs to live in Jamaica in 2026 — rent, food, utilities, and transport in USD.
A comfortable, modest lifestyle in Jamaica in 2026 runs between $1,200 and $2,500 USD per month for a single person, depending heavily on where you live and how locally you're willing to eat and shop. Couples can stretch that further with shared costs.
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The exchange rate as of mid-2026 is hovering around J$158 to US$1, so when Jamaicans quote you a price in Jamaican dollars, a quick rough conversion is: divide by 160 and you're close enough.
Quick Summary
- Comfortable single-person budget: $1,200–$2,500 USD/month
- Rent (1-bedroom, decent area): $500–$900 USD/month
- Groceries (eating local): $180–$300 USD/month
- Utilities (light, water, internet): $150–$250 USD/month
- Transport (no car): $80–$150 USD/month
- Dining out (local restaurants): $5–$15 USD per meal
- Private health insurance: $80–$200 USD/month depending on age and coverage
- Jamaica is NOT cheap by Caribbean standards — but it's cheaper than Barbados or the Cayman Islands
Rent: The Biggest Variable
This is where the numbers spread the most. A basic one-bedroom apartment in a residential area of Kingston — say, Liguanea or Havendale — will cost you somewhere between J$70,000 and J$110,000 per month (roughly $440–$690 USD). Step up to a furnished place with backup generator and security in a gated complex near Norbrook or Barbican, and you're looking at J$150,000–J$200,000 ($940–$1,250 USD).
Outside of Kingston it gets cheaper. In Ocho Rios or Montego Bay, comparable rentals run slightly lower for unfurnished units. Portland and St. Elizabeth are even more affordable — you can rent a decent house with a yard for J$60,000–J$80,000 ($375–$500 USD) in some areas.
Buying is a different story. Property prices in prime areas have gone up significantly. A modest 3-bedroom house in a safe residential community in Kingston will start around $180,000–$250,000 USD and climb fast from there.
Food: Local vs. Imported Makes a Huge Difference
If you cook local, Jamaica is manageable. A week's worth of food from Coronation Market or a local produce vendor — yam, dasheen, ackee, callaloo, plantain, some chicken back — can come in under J$5,000 ($31 USD) for one person.
The moment you start buying imported goods from Hi-Lo, MegaMart, or PriceSmart, costs jump. A block of imported cheese: J$900–J$1,400. A jar of peanut butter: J$700. Box of cereal: J$1,200. These things add up fast if you're not watching.
A realistic mixed grocery budget for one person eating a combination of local and some imported products: J$30,000–J$45,000/month (~$190–$280 USD).
Eating out at a local cookshop lunch spot — rice and peas, chicken, salad — runs J$600–J$800 ($4–$5 USD). A sit-down restaurant in New Kingston or Liguanea will cost you J$2,500–J$5,000 ($15–$31 USD) for a full meal with a drink.
Utilities: Light Bill Is the Painful One
Jamaica's electricity rates are among the highest in the Caribbean. This is not a rumour. JPS (Jamaica Public Service) rates mean that a modest apartment with air conditioning running regularly can rack up a monthly light bill of J$25,000–J$50,000 ($156–$312 USD). Without AC, you can get it down to J$10,000–J$18,000.
Water from NWC (National Water Commission) is relatively cheap — J$2,500–J$5,000 per month for typical household use. But outages are common in some areas, so many homes rely on a storage tank.
Internet options include Flow and Digicel. A decent home broadband plan runs J$5,000–J$9,000/month ($31–$56 USD). Speeds vary enormously by area.
Transport: Own a Car or Budget Carefully
Public transport (route taxis and JUTC buses in Kingston) is cheap — a route taxi ride rarely exceeds J$200–J$300. But it's slow, crowded, and not always available where you need it.
Owning a car in Jamaica has costs: insurance, road licences, maintenance on roads that will test your suspension, and petrol at around J$250–J$270 per litre. Budget at least J$50,000–J$80,000/month ($310–$500 USD) if you're running a car regularly.
App-based taxis like InDrive are available in Kingston and Montego Bay. A typical ride across Kingston: J$1,200–J$2,500.
Healthcare Costs
Public healthcare in Jamaica is free at point of service but notoriously stretched. Long waits, inconsistent medication availability, staff shortages — it's the reality. Most expats and middle-class Jamaicans go private.
A private GP visit: J$5,000–J$12,000 ($31–$75 USD). A specialist consultation at a private clinic: J$12,000–J$25,000. Private health insurance through a Jamaican provider (Sagicor, Canopy) or an international expat plan will run between $80–$200 USD/month depending on your age and the coverage level.
Dental care is available privately and is much cheaper than the US — a basic cleaning runs around J$8,000–J$15,000 ($50–$94 USD).
The Bottom Line on Budget
| Category | Monthly Cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Rent (1BR, decent area) | $500–$900 |
| Groceries | $190–$280 |
| Utilities | $150–$250 |
| Transport | $80–$350 |
| Healthcare/Insurance | $80–$200 |
| Dining out + misc | $100–$200 |
| Total | $1,100–$2,180 |
Real-world warning: Many people budget correctly on paper and then get blindsided by the light bill. Run the AC sparingly for your first three months to get a baseline before you commit to any long-term rental. A bill shock of J$80,000 in month one is a very Jamaican welcome gift nobody asked for.