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Cost of living in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe is 57% cheaper than the US, ranking #105 of 203 countries we cover for cost of living.

World Bank data through 2024 · last reviewed 2026-06.

Cost of living · US = 100
42.8
Ranks #105 of 203 · 57% cheaper than the US
GDP / capita (PPP)
$5,928
GNI / capita (PPP)
$5,870
Inflation · YoY
104.7%
Population
16.6M
Capital
Harare
Density
42 /km²
Urban
40%
Area
390.8K km²

What drives the cost here

Price levels by category, where the world average = 100. Above 100 is pricier than the global norm; below it is cheaper.

In Zimbabwe, communication is the priciest category relative to the world (168), while health is the most affordable (56).

Communication 168
Food & groceries 138
Transport 122
Housing & utilities 92
Restaurants & hotels 86
Health 56

Category price levels: World Bank ICP 2021 (world average = 100) · source

Zimbabwe on the map

What your money is worth here

A $100,000 US lifestyle would cost roughly $43,000 in Zimbabwe.

Quality of life

42/100 · #186 of 198

Beyond cost — health, safety, and connectivity. The score is a transparent, equal-weight composite of the verified metrics below (see methodology).

Quality-of-life score
42 / 100
Our transparent equal-weight composite
Life expectancy
63 yrs
World Bank · 2024 · source
Safety · homicide /100k
6.8
UNODC · 2022 · source
Infant mortality /1k
62
World Bank · 2024 · source
Internet users
42%
ITU · 2024 · source
Safe drinking water
25%
WHO/UNICEF · 2024 · source
Air quality · PM2.5
19 µg/m³
WHO · 2020 · source

About Zimbabwe

The hunter-gatherer San people first inhabited the area that eventually became Zimbabwe. Farming communities migrated to the area around A.D. 500 during the Bantu expansion, and Shona-speaking societies began to develop in the Limpopo valley and Zimbabwean highlands around the 9th century. These societies traded with Arab merchants on the Indian Ocean coast and organized under the Kingdom of Mapungubwe in the 11th century. A series of powerful trade-oriented Shona states succeeded Mapungubwe, including the Kingdom of Zimbabwe (ca.

Read the full background

1220-1450), Kingdom of Mutapa (ca. 1450-1760), and the Rozwi Empire. The Rozwi Empire expelled Portuguese colonists from the Zimbabwean plateau, but the Ndebele clan of Zulu King MZILIKAZI eventually conquered the area in 1838 during the era of conflict and population displacement known as the Mfecane. In the 1880s, colonists arrived with the British South Africa Company (BSAC) and obtained a written concession for mining rights from Ndebele King LOBENGULA. The king later disavowed the concession and accused the BSAC agents of deceit. The BSAC annexed Mashonaland and then conquered Matabeleland during the First Matabele War of 1893-1894, establishing company rule over the territory. In 1923, the UK annexed BSAC holdings south of the Zambezi River, which became the British colony of Southern Rhodesia. The 1930 Land Apportionment Act restricted Black land ownership and established rules that would favor the White minority for decades. A new constitution in 1961 further cemented White minority rule.In 1965, the government under White Prime Minister Ian SMITH unilaterally declared its independence from the UK. London did not recognize Rhodesia’s independence and demanded more voting rights for the Black majority in the country. International diplomacy and an uprising by Black Zimbabweans led to biracial elections in 1979 and independence (as Zimbabwe) in 1980. Robert MUGABE, who led the uprising and became the nation's first prime minister, was the country's only ruler (as president since 1987) from independence until 2017. In the mid-1980s, the government tortured and killed thousands of civilians in a crackdown on dissent known as the Gukurahundi campaign. Economic mismanagement and chaotic implementation of land redistribution policies periodically crippled the economy. General elections in 2002, 2008, and 2013 were severely flawed and widely condemned but allowed MUGABE to remain president. In 2017, Vice President Emmerson MNANGAGWA became president after a military intervention that forced MUGABE to resign, and MNANGAGWA cemented power by sidelining rival Grace MUGABE (Robert MUGABE’s wife). In 2018, MNANGAGWA won the presidential election, and he has maintained the government's longstanding practice of violently disrupting protests and politicizing institutions. Economic conditions remain dire under MNANGAGWA.

Background from the CIA World Factbook (public domain), archived 2026-06-03.

Frequently asked

Is Zimbabwe expensive to live in?

Zimbabwe is 57% cheaper than the US, ranking #105 of the 203 countries we track. Its most expensive category relative to the world is communication; health costs the least.

How much money do you need to live in Zimbabwe?

A lifestyle that costs $100,000 in the United States would cost roughly $43,000 in Zimbabwe, going by overall price levels. The salary translator turns your own figure into a local equivalent.

Is Zimbabwe cheaper than the United States?

Yes. Its overall price level is 42.8, against 100 for the United States.

What is the quality of life in Zimbabwe?

Zimbabwe scores 42 out of 100 on our quality-of-life index (#186 of 198), a composite of life expectancy, safety, health, and connectivity, with life expectancy around 63 years.

Every number, sourced.

We cite the exact source and year for each figure. Derived values are computed at build time, never hand-entered.

Price level index (US = 100)
Derived: nominal ÷ PPP GDP per capita, indexed to the US
42.8
GDP per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$5,928
GNI per capita (PPP)
World Bank · 2024 · source
$5,870
Inflation (annual %)
World Bank · 2022 · source
104.7%
Population
World Bank · 2024 · source
16.6M
Population density
World Bank · 2023 · source
42 /km²
Urban population
World Bank · 2024 · source
40%
Surface area
World Bank · 2023 · source
390.8K km²

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