Been looking into where you can actually afford to live without compromising on safety, and honestly the data is pretty interesting. Turns out there are solid options if you know where to look - places that nail both the cheapest and safest criteria without forcing you to choose between your wallet and your peace of mind.



What caught my attention first is how heavily Ohio dominates this list. Seven cities from one state making the cut for cheapest and safest places to live in the US is wild. New Philadelphia kicks things off with an annual cost of living around $35,500 and a violent crime rate of just 0.69 per 1,000 people. Monthly mortgage sitting at around $1,100 for a home averaging $186k. That's the kind of math that actually works.

New Ulm, Minnesota is another standout - even lower violent crime at 0.29 per 1,000, though the cost of living edges up slightly to $36,361 annually. You're looking at homes around $222k there. Then there's San Elizario, Texas with the lowest violent crime rate on the list at 0.10 per 1,000 - homes are cheaper too, averaging $167k.

The middle tier gets interesting. Columbus, Indiana has a population over 50k but still keeps annual costs under $40,500. Trenton, Michigan shows a livability score of 86 while staying in that $41k range. These aren't tiny towns where everything shuts down at 5pm.

What's notable is how consistent the pattern is - these cheapest and safest places to live in the US tend to cluster in the Midwest and parts of the Northeast. You're not seeing massive home values, which obviously keeps the housing costs down, but the trade-off is lower violent crime rates across the board. Most are sitting between 0.10 and 0.69 per 1,000 for violent crime.

If you're serious about finding somewhere affordable that won't stress you out about safety, this kind of data is worth digging into. The full breakdown includes 15 cities with their specific numbers, but the pattern is clear - you don't have to pick between cheap rent and feeling secure.
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