USA
New York City
The world's most ambitious city — extraordinary opportunity with an extraordinary price tag
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$11,000–$16,000+ / month
3-bed family home
~$6,800 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$130
Nanny
~$30 / hr
New York City is one of the world's great cities for career, culture, and family life. It has world-class schools and hospitals, a vast international community, and an energy that is genuinely unique. The trade-offs are the highest housing costs of any city in this guide, a complex and expensive healthcare system that requires private insurance, and a pace that demands organisation. Families who commit fully to NYC typically find it deeply rewarding.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1Check your visa status — citizens of Visa Waiver Program countries (UK, EU, Australia, Canada, and others) enter the US on an ESTA for up to 90 days; working families need an employer-sponsored H-1B, O-1, or L-1 visa before arriving
- 2Start your housing search 8–12 weeks before your move — NYC's rental market is extremely competitive; properties in family neighbourhoods are taken within 24–72 hours of listing
- 3Contact private and independent schools 12–18 months before your intended start date — NYC's private school admissions process is long and competitive
- 4Apply for your Social Security Number (SSN — the US's primary government ID required for employment, banking, and tax filing) at a Social Security Administration office in your first week
- 5Arrange comprehensive private health insurance before arriving — employer-sponsored plans are standard; without insurance, US medical costs are extremely high
- 6Open a US bank account (Chase, Bank of America, or Citibank) — required for rent payments, direct deposit, and all US financial transactions
- 7Explore NYC public school options via the NYC Department of Education (schools.nyc.gov) — district zoning determines your assigned school; quality varies significantly by district
- 8Get a New York State Driver's License or non-driver ID at your nearest DMV (Department of Motor Vehicles) — widely accepted as primary identification; bring passport, visa, and 2 proofs of NY address
Family fit
Great for
- Finance, tech, media, or arts professionals whose industry is headquartered in NYC and where employer sponsorship is available
- Families who want their children immersed in the world's most diverse and stimulating urban environment
- Parents comfortable with a high-cost, high-intensity lifestyle in exchange for extraordinary career and cultural opportunity
- Families with strong international school preferences — NYC has an excellent private and independent school ecosystem
Watch out for
- Housing costs are extreme — a 3-bed family apartment in a good school district costs $5,500–$12,000/month; budget carefully before committing
- Healthcare requires private insurance — without employer coverage, family health insurance can cost $1,500–$3,000/month; there is no public option for most working expats
- The H-1B work visa is subject to an annual lottery — employer sponsorship does not guarantee a visa in the same year; discuss timing carefully with your employer
- NYC's intensity and pace are real — commute times, school competition, and cost of living require sustained organisation that not every family finds sustainable long-term
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestJul · 30.1°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · -9.2°Cmean daily low
- WettestDec · 132.7 mmmonth total
- DriestFeb · 94.4 mmmonth total
- Low
- -9.2°C
- Rain
- 99.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- -8.1°C
- Rain
- 94.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- -4.8°C
- Rain
- 113.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~9
- Low
- 0.9°C
- Rain
- 106.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~9
- Low
- 6.7°C
- Rain
- 100.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- 11.9°C
- Rain
- 114.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~10
- Low
- 17.6°C
- Rain
- 113.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~9
- Low
- 17.4°C
- Rain
- 113.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~9
- Low
- 13°C
- Rain
- 96.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- 5.9°C
- Rain
- 123.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~10
- Low
- 0.3°C
- Rain
- 101.1 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- -4.3°C
- Rain
- 132.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~11
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 11.6°C | -9.2°C | 99.2 mm | 8 |
| Feb | 10.3°C | -8.1°C | 94.4 mm | 8 |
| Mar | 13.5°C | -4.8°C | 113.5 mm | 9 |
| Apr | 19.2°C | 0.9°C | 106.8 mm | 9 |
| May | 23.4°C | 6.7°C | 100.8 mm | 8 |
| Jun | 27.4°C | 11.9°C | 114.6 mm | 10 |
| Jul | 30.1°C | 17.6°C | 113.8 mm | 9 |
| Aug | 29.6°C | 17.4°C | 113.8 mm | 9 |
| Sep | 27.6°C | 13°C | 96.6 mm | 8 |
| Oct | 23.8°C | 5.9°C | 123.7 mm | 10 |
| Nov | 18.1°C | 0.3°C | 101.1 mm | 8 |
| Dec | 14.3°C | -4.3°C | 132.7 mm | 11 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Jul (mean daily high ~30°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~-9°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Dec (~133 mm total); driest: Feb (~94 mm).
- Winter nights can dip near freezing (Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, Nov, Dec) — reliable home heating and warm layers for school commutes matter for children.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 40.714°, -74.006° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
US immigration rules are federal — the same in every state and city. Short visits: travellers from VWP (Visa Waiver Program) countries must get ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization — online permission to board a US flight) before travel. After you land, CBP (US Customs and Border Protection) admits you for a limited time — usually up to 90 days per trip under VWP — and records it on your I-94 (official admit-until date at i94.cbp.dhs.gov). B-2 (tourist visa) visitors are often given up to six months per trip on I-94, but the officer decides. None of these allow paid work for a US employer. To live and work long-term, you need an employer-backed petition filed with USCIS (US Citizenship and Immigration Services) and a visa such as H-1B, O-1, or L-1 — or, for many Canadian and Mexican professionals, TN under USMCA. There is no general US remote-work or digital-nomad visa.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
ESTA / B-1/B-2 Visitor Visa
ESTA: apply on esta.cbp.dhs.gov before you fly if your country is in the VWP — approval usually lasts two years, but each stay ends on the date CBP puts on your I-94 (often 90 days max per entry). B-2: apply at a US consulate if you are not VWP-eligible; how long you may stay each trip is set at the border on I-94 (often up to six months, not guaranteed). Tourism, family visits, and scouting only — not US payroll work.
Employer-sponsored work visa (H-1B / O-1 / L-1 / TN)
A US employer (or qualifying US entity) files with USCIS for H-1B, O-1, or L-1, or you may qualify for TN at a border or consulate if you are Canadian or Mexican in a listed profession. You start paid work only after your status allows it — there is no broad freelance or remote-nomad visa for the US.
ESTA / B-2 — how long you can stay and what to do first
- Step 1 — Before travel: complete ESTA (VWP nationals) or book a B-2 visa interview — consular wait times vary a lot by country.
- Step 2 — After entry: download your I-94 from i94.cbp.dhs.gov — that admit-until date is your real leave-by deadline for this trip.
- VWP/ESTA: plan for about 90 days per visit unless I-94 shows less — you usually cannot extend VWP from inside the US.
- Paid work for a US employer is not allowed on tourist status; rules on other activities are strict — ask a US immigration attorney if you are unsure.
- Good use for relocation planning: a short trip to view neighbourhoods, schools, and employers — then leave before I-94 expires, or get an appropriate work visa before moving (often applied from outside the US).
- Overstaying past your I-94 date can mean long bars on returning — treat that date as firm.
Work visas — from offer to first paycheck
- H-1B (specialty occupation — typically degree-level jobs): annual cap and often a lottery in March; many new cap hires target an October 1 start — confirm each year with your employer. Processing often takes roughly several months unless premium processing is used where available.
- O-1 (extraordinary ability in certain fields): no H-1B cap; heavy documentation; initial approval often up to three years; timelines often a few months unless expedited.
- L-1A / L-1B (intracompany transfer — executives, managers, or specialized knowledge staff from a foreign branch of the same company): no H-1B lottery; employer files a petition — often roughly 2–4 months processing; one year of prior employment abroad and corporate relationship rules apply.
- TN (USMCA): for Canadian and Mexican citizens in specific professional roles under the treaty — often faster than H-1B for eligible people; duration commonly up to three years per approval; renewals possible — confirm your job title matches the treaty list with an attorney.
- Dependents: spouses and children may receive H-4, O-3, L-2, or TD status — children can usually attend school; whether a spouse may work depends on category and current rules — verify with an attorney.
- Typical order: signed offer → employer and counsel file → USCIS approval → visa stamp abroad if needed, or change of status if eligible → Social Security Number → payroll starts on or after your authorised employment date.
- Changing employers usually requires a new or transferred petition — do not assume you can switch jobs without immigration steps.
Within a few days of every arrival, check i94.cbp.dhs.gov and note your admit-until date — that is when you must leave or change status (your passport visa stamp can show a later expiry). If you need H-1B subject to the annual cap, ask your employer for this year’s registration dates and typical October 1 start — timelines shift each year.
Registration & Social Security Number
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- Apply for your SSN (Social Security Number — the US's primary government ID for all financial and government purposes) at a Social Security Administration office. Bring your passport, visa, and I-94 arrival record (downloadable at cbp.gov).
- There is no mandatory address registration system in the US — update your address with your employer, bank, and the SSA as soon as you move in.
- Apply for a New York State Driver's License or non-driver ID at your nearest DMV — required: passport, visa, I-94, and 2 proofs of NY address.
- File a US tax return (Form 1040) each year — your employer withholds federal and state income tax from payroll. Engage a US CPA (Certified Public Accountant) familiar with expat and international tax.
- Green card (lawful permanent residency) is a long-term pathway — most employment-based green cards require 3–10+ years of sponsorship. Your immigration attorney tracks this timeline.
Apply for your SSN at your nearest Social Security Administration office (ssa.gov) in your first week — required for employment, banking, and tax filing; takes 2–4 weeks to arrive by post.
Banking
- Chase and Bank of America are the two largest banks used by expat families in NYC — both have extensive branch networks throughout the five boroughs.
- You need your passport, US visa, I-94 arrival record, and a US address to open an account. Most major banks do not require an SSN initially but will need it within 30–60 days.
- Citibank and HSBC have good international banking infrastructure and experience with foreign-born clients — useful if you maintain accounts in multiple countries.
- Wise and Revolut work from arrival for international transfers and foreign currency spending — widely used while US banking is being set up.
- Most NYC landlords require rent by personal check, Zelle, or ACH bank transfer — a US bank account is essential within the first week.
Chase and Citibank accept new arrivals with passport and visa — open an account in your first week; most NYC landlords require a US bank account for rent payment by electronic transfer.
Housing
NYC is one of the most expensive rental markets in the world. Family-friendly neighbourhoods concentrate in Brooklyn (Park Slope, Carroll Gardens), the Upper West Side and Upper East Side in Manhattan, and in New Jersey suburbs (Hoboken, Jersey City, Montclair) offering more space at lower cost.
Where to search
These are NYC's main long-term rental platforms — this is where residents rent, not Airbnb.
Search by neighbourhood name inside each platform — NYC's rental market is hyperlocal.
Tip: arrive with 4–6 weeks booked in a furnished short-stay rental; the long-term market moves within 24–72 hours of listing and you must be available to view and apply immediately.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed apartment, Manhattan (Midtown / Upper West Side): $3,800–$5,800/month
- 3-bed apartment, Brooklyn (Park Slope / Carroll Gardens): $5,500–$9,000/month
- 3-bed apartment, Upper West Side or Upper East Side (Manhattan): $7,500–$14,000/month
- 3-bed apartment or townhouse, Hoboken or Jersey City NJ (PATH train commute): $3,200–$5,500/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport and US visa
- Employment verification letter from your employer confirming salary
- 3 months of recent bank statements and last 3 payslips (or offer letter if newly arrived)
- NYC landlords typically require income of 40–45 times the monthly rent — plan your search to match your salary level
- 1–2 months security deposit — legally capped at 1 month in New York State
- US bank account for ACH transfer or check payments
Schools
NYC has both excellent public schools in certain districts and a large, competitive private school ecosystem. Public school quality varies dramatically by district — researching your catchment zone before choosing a neighbourhood is essential.
Public system
NYC public schools are free and open to all residents regardless of immigration status. Quality varies significantly by district — District 2 (Manhattan) and District 15 (Brooklyn/Park Slope) are among the highest-performing. All instruction is in English. Enrol via the NYC Department of Education at schools.nyc.gov.
International options
NYC has a large private and independent school sector serving diplomatic, finance, and international business communities. British, IB, and American curriculum private schools concentrate on Manhattan's Upper East and Upper West Sides and in Brooklyn Heights. Fees range from $35,000 to $60,000/year. Admission processes begin 12–18 months before start date.
Language notes
English is the language of instruction in all public and most private schools. NYC public schools provide ESL (English as a Second Language) support for non-English-speaking students. Private language tutoring costs roughly $80–$150/hr in NYC.
Choose your neighbourhood based on the school district first — public school catchment zones in NYC are strict and some of the best schools are only accessible by address.
Education options
NYC public schools — high-performing districts
Free, open to all residents. Quality varies by district. Districts 2 (Lower Manhattan/West Village) and 15 (Brooklyn/Park Slope) are among the highest-rated.
British / IB curriculum independent schools
Strong British and IB sector on Manhattan's Upper East and Upper West Sides serving diplomatic and expat families. Extremely competitive admissions.
American independent / prep schools
Prestigious American independent schools with selective admissions. Apply 12–18 months ahead.
Childcare
NYC offers free public Pre-K (ages 4–5) and 3-K (ages 3–4) programmes through NYC Public Schools. Under-3s rely on licensed daycare centres or nannies — both are expensive. Nanny costs in NYC are among the highest in the world.
Daycare & nurseries
- 3-K and Pre-K — NYC's free public early education for ages 3–5 — apply via the NYC Schools Account (account.schools.nyc.gov); priority for district residents
- Licensed daycare centres for ages 6 weeks to 3 years — fees typically $2,200–$3,500/month; high-quality centres in Park Slope and Upper West Side have waitlists of 12+ months
- ACS (Administration for Children's Services) subsidised daycare is income-tested and difficult to access for most expat families at market salaries
- Visit 3–5 centres before choosing — quality and philosophy vary considerably in NYC's large childcare market
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time nanny in NYC: typically $3,500–$5,000/month (roughly $22–$32/hr) — among the highest of any city in this guide
- Part-time nanny / babysitter: roughly $25–$40/hr depending on experience and neighbourhood
- Nanny taxes are legally required in NYC — as employer, you must pay Social Security, Medicare, and unemployment taxes; use a nanny payroll service (HomePay or SurePayroll) to stay compliant
- Start searching 2–3 months before arriving — quality nannies in NYC move quickly
Where to find childcare
- Care.com — the largest US childcare platform with a strong NYC section for nannies and daycare
- UrbanSitter — popular platform in NYC specifically for nannies and sitters
- Search 'NYC Expats with Kids' on Google — community recommendations from parents in your neighbourhood are invaluable for finding trustworthy nannies
Healthcare
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- The US has no universal public healthcare — private insurance is required. Most working families receive employer-sponsored health insurance; confirm your plan covers dependents and has in-network providers near your neighbourhood.
- Employer-sponsored family health insurance typically costs $0–$800/month in employee contributions depending on the plan — confirm total family coverage before accepting a job offer.
- Without employer coverage, a family ACA marketplace plan (Affordable Care Act — the US's subsidised private insurance marketplace) costs roughly $1,200–$2,500/month at market incomes.
- Major family-friendly hospitals and paediatric care: NewYork-Presbyterian, NYU Langone Health, and Mount Sinai — all have strong paediatric departments and internationally trained staff.
- Budget for significant out-of-pocket costs even with insurance — family deductibles of $1,000–$5,000/year are standard on most US employer plans.
Verify your employer's health plan covers your full family from your first day of work — enrolment windows are strict in the US and missing the window means waiting until the next open enrolment period.
Safety
- Violent crime in family neighbourhoods (Park Slope, Upper West Side, Carroll Gardens, Forest Hills) is uncommon — NYC's major family areas are broadly safe for daily life
- Petty theft and pickpocketing occur on the subway and in crowded tourist areas (Times Square, Grand Central) — keep bags secured and stay aware on public transit
- Crime levels vary significantly by neighbourhood — research specific areas before choosing where to live; StreetEasy listings often include neighbourhood context
- The subway is generally safe during the day; at night, rideshare (Uber/Lyft) is a sensible option for families with young children
- Traffic is the real daily safety risk — pedestrian accidents are common; teach children to wait for walk signals and stay off phones when crossing streets
FAQ
Is New York City good for families?
Yes — if the budget works. World-class schools, healthcare, and culture; unmatched diversity. The trade-offs are very high rent, tight space, and a pace that rewards planning. Families who commit often love it; those stretched financially feel the stress quickly.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget roughly $11,000–$16,000+/month all-in for a family of four in many setups — rent and childcare dominate. Costs vary enormously by borough and whether you use private school; build a spreadsheet before you sign a lease.
Is housing hard to find here?
Very competitive — good units go fast, broker fees are common, and landlords expect strong income proof. Start 8–12 weeks ahead and be ready to submit a complete application the day you view a fit.
Do children need private school here, or can public schools work?
Strong public and charter options exist but quality varies sharply by zone — research your zoned school before you choose an address. Many international families use private or selective public pathways; there is no UK-style catchment guarantee of "good everywhere."
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Quality is excellent once you are insured — there is no NHS-style universal coverage for working-age newcomers. Employer-sponsored insurance is typical; without it, costs are high. Build a network of in-network paediatricians and urgent care early.
Do you need a car in New York City?
Often no in Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn and Queens — subways and buses cover most needs. Families in New Jersey suburbs, Long Island, or outer Queens frequently need a car for school and weekend life.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Moderate — Social Security number, state ID or driver's licence, school enrolment packets, and insurance paperwork each have their own queues. Immigration-linked steps add time for visa holders. Nothing is exotic, but the volume adds up.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
How small apartments feel versus the price — and how much school choice drives neighbourhood choice. Second: summer heat and humidity without universal AC in older buildings; check cooling before you lease.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Expats in New York City' on Google — active community for international families in NYC
Search: “Expats in New York City Facebook group”Search on GoogleSearch 'Relocating to New York City' on Google — practical community for families in the relocation process
Search: “Relocating to New York City Facebook group”Search on Google