Salary Needed to Live Comfortably in Fargo
A single person needs roughly $71,704/year to live comfortably in Fargo — that means a 1-bedroom at $1,101/month, local prices near the national average, and enough left over for savings and discretionary spending under the 50/30/20 budget rule. For a household in a 2-bedroom, the number is closer to $85,874/year.
AffordMap analysis using BLS Regional Price Parities and HUD Fair Market Rents
Monthly budget breakdown
Based on the 50/30/20 rule: 50% on needs, 30% on wants, 20% on savings and debt. All costs adjusted for Fargo's Regional Price Parity of 100.
Needs (50% of take-home) — $2,612/month
Wants (30%)
Dining out, entertainment, travel, shopping, subscriptions
Savings & debt (20%)
401(k), emergency fund, student loans, investments
How Fargo compares
Fargo sits right around the national average in cost. An RPP of 100 means your dollar buys roughly what it would anywhere. Rent at $1,412/month is typical for a mid-size metro. Most careers that pay at or above the national median salary can sustain a comfortable lifestyle here.
The $85,874 figure assumes a 2-bedroom apartment, standard grocery and transportation costs, health insurance, and the 50/30/20 savings rule. Your actual number depends on whether you have dependents, a car payment, student loans, or spending patterns that differ from the averages. Use the take-home calculator to plug in your specific salary and see what you'd actually keep in Fargo.
Careers that pay enough to live comfortably in Fargo
Occupations where the median salary exceeds the $85,874 comfort threshold. See the full salary and affordability breakdown for each.
Frequently asked questions
What salary do you need to live comfortably in Fargo?
A single person needs about $71,704/year. A household renting a 2-bedroom apartment needs approximately $85,874/year. These figures use the 50/30/20 budget framework — half your take-home on necessities, 30% on discretionary spending, and 20% on savings or debt repayment. Rent ($1,412/month for a 2BR) is the largest single expense.
Is Fargo expensive compared to the rest of the country?
Fargo's Regional Price Parity is 100 (the national average is 100). That's close to average — costs are roughly in line with national norms. Rent is typically the largest cost difference between cities: a 2-bedroom in Fargo runs $1,412/month vs. a national average of about $1,412.
What does the 50/30/20 rule mean?
It's a budgeting framework popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren. 50% of your after-tax income goes to needs (rent, groceries, utilities, insurance, minimum debt payments). 30% goes to wants (dining out, entertainment, travel, hobbies). 20% goes to savings and extra debt payments (emergency fund, 401k, student loans beyond minimum). "Living comfortably" means having enough income that this split works without cutting necessities or living paycheck to paycheck.
