What My Life Would Have Cost in 1950
In 1950, the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar was more than 13 times greater than it is today, meaning your money went much further, at least when it came to certain expenses. For instance, the average cost of a brand-new Chevrolet sedan was just $1,450 that year, the equivalent of around $19,416 today when adjusted for inflation. The median price for a single-family home, meanwhile, was only $7,354, or around $98,474 in today’s money. (If only!)
That said, salaries were lower in the mid-20th century as well. The median salary was $3,135 (around $41,979 in today’s dollars) for white working individuals and $1,569 (around $21,009 today) for people of color — a discrepancy caused by the discriminatory hiring practices of the time. That’s compared to a nationwide median annual salary of $63,128 today.
But even accounting for the lower household income in 1950, the relative purchasing power was greater at the onset of the ’50s than it is today. For instance, it took about 2.5 years’ worth of paychecks for a person earning the average salary for white workers in 1950 to afford a new home, while the median cost of a new home today is nearly six times the average salary.
It’s a refrain you hear a lot — life used to be much more affordable. Which got me wondering: What would my own lifestyle have cost if I lived in 1950? Would my monthly bills as a New York City resident be substantially easier to manage?
To investigate, I took a look at the cost of housing, food, and even Yankees tickets in 1950 and input the values into inflation calculators from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as well as the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, taking the rough average of values from the start and end of the year 1950. Here’s what I found.

Monthly Rent
According to housing data from the 1950 U.S. census, the average rent of an apartment in New York City that year was $49 per month (around $656 in today’s dollars). Unsurprisingly, rents were higher in Manhattan — the borough I live in — at $56 per month (equal to around $752 today). Rents on my exact block in the Murray Hill neighborhood were higher still, coming in at $88 per month (around $1,181 adjusted for inflation).
Much to my chagrin, this is a far cry from what I’m paying monthly today. Let’s put it this way: While someone living in my building earning the median salary (for white workers) in 1950 would’ve put roughly a third of their annual pay toward rent, the percentage in my own case hovers closer to half.
It’s also worth noting that housing costs in 1950 varied substantially throughout Manhattan, depending on the neighborhood. Rents dipped as low as $14 per month (equal to around $192 today) in the city’s Two Bridges neighborhood — an area next to the Brooklyn Bridge that has no personal residences today. On the other end of the spectrum, the block between 58th and 59th streets along the East River was among the most expensive in the entire city, where average rents totalled $384 per month (around $5,144 adjusted).











