Components rounded to the dollar; the total is computed before rounding. The 48% line (30% housing + 15% commute + 3% utilities) is always evaluated on utilities-full at the chosen income basis.
Who these dollars describe. A representative household in South Central Connecticut: the county’s median-priced home (tenure-weighted across renters and owners), typical utility usage for the selected income bracket, and the commute priced at the county’s 1.17 workers per household (ACS B08202) making 22 round-trips a month to Manhattan from New Haven. Your household will differ — use “My income” below to put the same dollars on your own denominator.
HUD income limits are the housing industry’s “AMI” — a median family income benchmarked to a 4-person household. It runs well above the median household figure (avg +47% in this metro vs the CBSA median household), which is why the same county can look affordable on one basis and stretched on another. HUD’s published 80% limit is capped and adjusted — in high-housing-cost areas it can exceed the area’s own median (Jersey City: $117,900 vs $110,100). “My income” recomputes the share client-side from the dollar figures (utility figures stay at the HUD-AMI bracket).
Where the money goes
| Component | $/mo | Geography | Source (vintage) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (shelter) | $1,409 | county | ACS 2020–2024 tenure-weighted gross housing cost ($1,771) minus embedded utilities — never counted twice |
| Utilities (full) — the product number | $533 | county + state + national | sum of the five lines below |
| energy (electricity, gas, heating fuel) | $266 | county, income-bracketed | DOE LEAD 2022, trended per fuel to 2026 EIA prices (elec ×1.18–1.37, gas ×0.92–1.14, oil ×0.83–0.87) |
| water / sewer | $69 | national mean | BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2024, “water and other public services” (local rates vary 2–3×) |
| broadband | $85 | state median | FCC Urban Rate Survey 2026, standalone fixed ≥100/20 Mbps |
| cell phone | $113 | national mean | BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2024, “cellular phone service” |
| trash | $0 | state norm | municipal collection funded in property tax (CT norm); toggle above if you pay a private hauler |
| Utilities (energy-only) — benchmark-comparable | $266 | county, income-bracketed | the figure used in every CNT H+T® comparison |
| Commute (household) | $1,217 | county’s commute towns | $1,045 per commuter × 1.17 workers/HH (ACS B08202); chosen mode (rail — cheaper in every town), 22 round-trips/mo, posted fares + tolls + $9 congestion charge + parking + fuel, effective June 2026 |
| True Lifestyle Cost | $3,159 | — | housing + utilities (full) + commute |
energy $266 ▾
DOE LEAD 2022 county average for the selected income bracket, trended to June 2026 EIA state prices per fuel. CT bracket figures: median-bracket $293 · AMI-bracket $266 · 80%-bracket $261.water/sewer $69 ▾
BLS CEX 2024 Table 1400, national consumer-unit mean. No free national rate database exists (AWWA paywalled; Circle of Blue survey ended 2019); cross-checked against NJ American Water’s BPU-filed tariff (~$51/mo water-only at 4 kgal).broadband $85 ▾
FCC Urban Rate Survey 2026 (DA 25-1088), state median standalone fixed broadband ≥100/20 Mbps: NJ $95 · NY $100 · CT $85.cell $113 ▾
BLS CEX 2024 “cellular phone service”, national consumer-unit mean ($61–$179 by household size; household-size cohorts staged for v2).trash $0 ▾
CT norm: municipal collection funded through property taxes — already inside the housing figure, not a separate bill. Private-hauler townships typically pay $25–45/mo; use the toggle.Commute towns in South Central Connecticut
| Town | All-in $/mo (town) | Rail $/mo | Drive $/mo | Rail saves | One-way |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Haven, CT | $3,159 | $1,045 | $2,782 | $1,737/mo | 135 min Metro-North → Grand Central |
“All-in” = county housing + county utilities (full, HUD-AMI bracket) + that town’s household commute. Rail/drive/savings columns are per commuter. County C uses the average of its towns’ chosen-mode cost.
Against the established benchmark
Why our dollars differ from H+T®. CNT’s H+T® Index reports affordability as a percentage of regional income, built on a model of total household transportation spending — car ownership, errands and all other travel included. The True Lifestyle Cost Index publishes dollars, because every component is a real price: ACS housing costs, DOE/EIA-trended utility bills, and a commute priced fare-by-fare and toll-by-toll (including the $9 NYC congestion charge). The two agree on which places are expensive — r = 0.90 on the comparable construct across the pilot counties — and differ exactly where they should: CNT’s T carries the cost of owning cars; our C prices the commute itself. The gap between South Central Connecticut’s CNT figure (46%) and our comparable-construct figure (40.6%) is mostly that car-ownership and non-work travel overhead, plus the 2022-vs-2024/2026 vintage difference.
H+T® Index data © Center for Neighborhood Technology (htaindex.cnt.org), used for comparison; the True Lifestyle Cost Index is independent and not affiliated with or endorsed by CNT.
The income bases, side by side
Questions people ask
- How much does it cost to live in South Central Connecticut, CT and commute to Manhattan?
- About $3,159 a month ($37,909 a year) as of June 2026: $1,409 housing + $533 utilities + $1,217 household commute (True Lifestyle Cost Index v1, utilities at the HUD-AMI income bracket).
- What salary do you need to live in South Central Connecticut and commute to Manhattan?
- About $79,000 a year keeps housing + utilities + commute at or under the 48% affordability line. At the HUD FY2026 area median income ($123,200) the county runs 30.8% of income; at the county's own median household income ($88,197) it runs 43.3%.
- Is South Central Connecticut affordable for a Manhattan commuter?
- At the HUD area median income, yes by the 48% test: 30.8% of income (≤ 48% = TLC-affordable), metro tier 5 of 5 among the 11 pilot counties (1 = most affordable fifth). At the county's own median household income it runs 43.3% — the income basis matters, which is why the index lets you choose it.
- Is it cheaper to drive or take the train from South Central Connecticut to Manhattan?
- The train, in every South Central Connecticut commute town we computed: rail saves $1,737 a month per commuter versus driving all the way in, once tolls, the $9 NYC congestion charge, Midtown parking and fuel are priced.
About the True Lifestyle Cost Index™. The True Lifestyle Cost Index is an independent affordability index published by TLCengine, computed from U.S. Census American Community Survey data, U.S. DOE and EIA energy data, HUD income limits, FCC and BLS consumer surveys, and TLCengine’s own door-to-door commute-cost engine. Krishna Malyala, broker, NMLS #1875937.
Not affiliated with CNT. TLCengine and the True Lifestyle Cost Index are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the Center for Neighborhood Technology. H+T® is a registered trademark of the Center for Neighborhood Technology; where shown, H+T® Index data is © CNT (htaindex.cnt.org) and is used solely for comparison, with attribution. The True Lifestyle Cost Index does not republish CNT data.
Income limits. “HUD AMI” figures are HUD FY2026 area median family incomes and published income limits (huduser.gov); they are 4-person family benchmarks and differ from median household income.
Not financial advice. Estimates for research and comparison; verify fares, tolls, housing and utility costs before transacting.