Skip to content
<- Back to Ho-Ho-Kus profile

Cost question

Is Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ expensive to live in?

A direct, data-backed answer using cost-of-living exposure, housing cost signals, rent pressure, and income context where the public dataset supports it.

Cost-of-living risk

98

/ 100

V2 relative score

Higher scores indicate higher cost pressure relative to the selected geography scope.

Direct answer

Yes. Local cost pressure is high in the current dataset.

Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ has a cost-of-living risk score of 98, which places it high relative to other city-level locations. That does not predict any individual household outcome, but it signals elevated housing-cost and rent-pressure conditions in the public data. This answer uses city-level data for Ho-Ho-Kus where the public dataset supports it.

Top drivers in this score

  • Median monthly housing costs

    $4,001

    Risk pressure percentile: 100

  • Median gross rent

    $2,857

    Risk pressure percentile: 99

  • Median home value

    $1,092,500

    Risk pressure percentile: 98

How this compares

Relative risk score97.8
Median (city-level locations)49.7
Delta vs median+48.1

Approximate percentile: 98 of 100

Coverage and confidence

Scope usedCity-level (place)
Metric coverage5/5
ConfidenceHigh confidence

Most core metrics are available at city level.

Cost signals

  • Median gross rent$2,857
  • Median home value$1,092,500
  • Median monthly housing costs$4,001
  • Rent as % of household income51.0%
  • Rent growth (YoY)+20.3%
  • Median household income$250,001

Scope: City-level (place) | Source: ACS 2023-2024 5-year | 2024

Why this matters

Cost of living affects financial risk because fixed costs can absorb income before households address debt, savings, transportation, healthcare, or emergency expenses. A higher score means local cost signals create more financial pressure relative to comparable places.

View full cost risk detail →

Common follow-up questions

Is Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ expensive to live in?

Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ has a cost-of-living risk score of 98, which places it high relative to other city-level locations. That does not predict any individual household outcome, but it signals elevated housing-cost and rent-pressure conditions in the public data. This answer uses city-level data for Ho-Ho-Kus where the public dataset supports it.

What cost data is used for Ho-Ho-Kus?

FinancialRiskIQ uses public indicators such as median gross rent, monthly housing costs, home value, rent-to-income ratio, and rent growth when available. The current answer uses city-level (place) data from ACS 2023-2024 5-year (2024).

Why can a city answer use county or state data?

Some public financial datasets are not complete at city level. When city-level metrics are missing, FinancialRiskIQ falls back to county or state baselines and labels that scope so users know exactly what geography is being used.