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Just spent some time digging through housing data and found something interesting - there are actually a bunch of overlooked cities across the US where you can get both affordable living AND low crime, which honestly feels rare these days.
Ohio keeps showing up everywhere in these rankings, which caught me off guard. Seven cities from one state in the top spots? That's wild. But when you look at the actual numbers, it makes sense - places like New Philadelphia, Parma Heights, and Berea are hitting that sweet spot of cheap housing and genuinely safe neighborhoods.
New Philadelphia caught my eye first. Under $36.5k annual cost of living, median home around $186k, and violent crime rates that are legitimately low. That's the kind of combo you don't see often anymore. New Ulm in Minnesota is similar - even safer on the violent crime front, though property crime is a bit higher.
Some of the cheaper options are smaller towns like San Elizario, Texas (under $37k yearly, homes around $167k) and Yorktown, Indiana. These aren't exactly household names, but that's kind of the point - they're flying under the radar while offering real value.
If you want something slightly bigger with more amenities, Columbus, Indiana and Hamilton, Ohio are solid middle grounds. Still way cheaper than major metros, still safe, but with actual population and infrastructure.
The data I'm looking at is from early 2025, pulled from FBI crime stats and census data, so it's recent enough to be relevant. What's interesting is how many of these safest, cheapest places to live in the usa are concentrated in the Midwest. Not exactly what you'd expect if you're used to coastal market hype.
Brunswick and North Ridgeville in Ohio, plus Edwardsville in Illinois round out the higher end of the list - still way cheaper than what you'd pay in any major city, but with higher livability scores. Edwardsville especially has a 90 livability rating, which is solid.
If you're actually looking to relocate somewhere affordable and safe, these cheapest and safest cities might be worth researching. The trade-off is they're smaller communities, but that's also why they haven't gotten expensive yet.