Living in Genoa, Italy
Genoa is one of the Italy destinations covered by GoWira's fiscal and lifestyle database, refreshed quarterly. A one-bedroom apartment in the Genoa city center rents for around €1,800/month, while the same layout in the suburbs averages €1,200/month — a typical center-vs-suburbs gap for a city this size. Everyday expenses run about €350 for groceries (single person) and €68 for a monthly public transport pass. On our cost-of-living index (100 = highest benchmark city), Genoa scores 85, which makes it one of the more expensive cities in the region.
If you're planning a move, a realistic first-year budget in Genoa starts at roughly €2,218/month for a single person in a central studio, before taxes, insurance or discretionary spending. Dining tends to cost €28 for a mid-range meal and €2 for a coffee at a local café, with a beer at a bar around €4. Owning a car adds approximately €480/month between fuel, parking and insurance — many residents in Genoa skip this in favour of public transport or the €68/month pass mentioned above.
Healthcare, schools and essentials
Italy offers a public healthcare system that residents access through social security contributions. Private health insurance for a single expat in Genoa costs around €75/month, with a family plan at €220. An out-of-pocket private GP visit runs about €63, while specialists charge around €110. Families should budget €1,500/month for international schooling, or €810/month for a local private school.
Who does Genoa suit best?
Genoa works especially well for mid-career remote workers who want a Western European base without London or Paris prices, digital nomads — a hot desk here costs around €250.
All figures are medians (p50), reviewed quarterly. Hit the calculator below for a number tailored to your salary and residency situation.
