Las Cruces composite
48.1 /100
Grade D · weighted across 7 dims
Side-by-side comparison across cost of living, rent, wages, crime, schools, childcare, and environment — sourced entirely from U.S. federal data, no crowdsourced estimates.
Las Cruces and Santa Fe differ across eleven dimensions of livability. Las Cruces has a cost-of-living index of 90.2 vs Santa Fe's 98.8 (national average = 100). A 2-bedroom averages $1,042/mo vs $1,685/mo.
Las Cruces (NM) and Santa Fe (NM) are assembled here from the same federal data pipeline — BEA Regional Price Parities, HUD Fair Market Rents, BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, FBI Uniform Crime Reports, NCES public-school counts, and EPA environmental indicators — so every number on this page is directly comparable. The overall cost index reads 90.2 for Las Cruces against 98.8 for Santa Fe, a 8.6-point gap on a scale where 100 equals the U.S. average. HUD's 2-bedroom Fair Market Rent — the figure used to set housing-choice voucher payment standards — is $1,042/mo in Las Cruces and $1,685/mo in Santa Fe, a $643/mo difference that compounds to $7,716 over a year.
Wage data is reported by metro delineation, and one of these metros is missing a BLS record for the latest OES cycle; the salary columns below fall back to available years. State-level violent crime, the most reliable geographic tier FBI UCR publishes, is 696.9 per 100,000 residents in NM vs 696.9 in NM, with property-crime rates of 2705.6 and 2705.6 respectively.
Schools are reported at the state tier by NCES: NM lists 873 public schools at a 14.4:1 student-teacher ratio, while NM lists 873 schools at 14.4:1 — a signal of class-size staffing, though individual district and school-level variation within each state is substantial. When these pieces are read together rather than in isolation, Las Cruces and Santa Fe are not simply "cheaper" or "more expensive" — they trade across dimensions, and which metro wins depends on whether your household optimizes for rent, wages, schools, childcare, safety, or environment. Treat the tables below as inputs to that trade-off, not as a single ranking.
Las Cruces composite
48.1 /100
Grade D · weighted across 7 dims
Santa Fe composite
35.7 /100
Grade F · weighted across 7 dims
Cost-of-living gap
-8.6 pts
Las Cruces vs Santa Fe BEA RPP
2-bed rent delta
$643 /mo
Santa Fe priced higher
Las Cruces composite (Grade D)
Santa Fe composite (Grade F)
Composite is a weighted roll-up of seven dimensions: cost (20%), wages (20%), rent (15%), safety (15%), schools (10%), childcare (10%), environment (10%). Each input normalized to a 0–100 percentile across all metros.
| Category | Las Cruces | Santa Fe |
|---|---|---|
| Overall RPP | 90.2 | 98.8 |
| Goods | 96.1 | 96.1 |
| Services | 77.9 | 76.7 |
| Rents | 63.0 | 108.0 |
What salary in Santa Fe gives the same purchasing power as your salary in Las Cruces?
Based on BEA Regional Price Parities (Las Cruces: 90.2, Santa Fe: 98.8, national avg = 100).
| Bedrooms | Las Cruces | Santa Fe |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | $744/mo | $1,259/mo |
| 1 Bedroom | $951/mo | $1,390/mo |
| 2 Bedroom | $1,042/mo | $1,685/mo |
| 3 Bedroom | $1,449/mo | $2,122/mo |
| 4 Bedroom | $1,580/mo | $2,231/mo |
| Crime Type (per 100K) | Las Cruces (NM) | Santa Fe (NM) |
|---|---|---|
| Violent Crime | 696.9 | 696.9 |
| Property Crime | 2705.6 | 2705.6 |
| Metric | NM | NM |
|---|---|---|
| Total Schools | 873 | 873 |
| Student-Teacher Ratio | 14.4:1 | 14.4:1 |
| Charter Schools | 11.6% | 11.6% |
| Metric | NM | NM |
|---|---|---|
| EPA Facilities | 111 | 111 |
| Water Systems | 590 | 590 |
| Superfund Sites | 21 | 21 |
| Water Violations | 7,529 | 7,529 |
| Metric | Las Cruces | Santa Fe |
|---|---|---|
| Median AQI | 62.0 | 45.0 |
| Good Air Days | 26.5% | 71.3% |
| Unhealthy Air Days | 32 days | 1 days |
| Metric | NM | NM |
|---|---|---|
| Water Safety Score | 4/100 | 4/100 |
| Total Violations | 154,522 | 154,522 |
| Health-Based Violations | 38,650 | 38,650 |
| Systems with Violations | 96.9% | 96.9% |
| Metric | NM | NM |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare Access Score | 0/100 | 0/100 |
| Population in Shortage Area | 100.0% | 100.0% |
| HPSA Designations | 275 | 275 |
HPSA = Health Professional Shortage Area, designated by HRSA. Higher access score = better healthcare availability.
| Metric | NM | NM |
|---|---|---|
| Disaster Safety Score | 51/100 | 51/100 |
| NRI Risk Score (avg county) | 58.9 | 58.9 |
| Expected Annual Loss Score | 51.5 | 51.5 |
FEMA National Risk Index (NRI) scores are county-level percentiles (0–100). Higher disaster safety score = lower relative risk. State-level values are county averages.
Crime, schools, childcare, and environment data shown at state level. Metro-specific data for these dimensions is not available.
Data from BEA, HUD, FBI UCR, BLS OES, NCES, DOL, EPA AQS, EPA SDWIS, HRSA, and FEMA NRI. Not affiliated with the U.S. Government.