Cost question
Is Orting, WA 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
78
/ 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.
Orting, WA has a cost-of-living risk score of 78, 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 Orting where the public dataset supports it.
Top drivers in this score
Median gross rent
$2,284
Risk pressure percentile: 97
Median monthly housing costs
$2,212
Risk pressure percentile: 94
Median home value
$493,100
Risk pressure percentile: 89
How this compares
Approximate percentile: 78 of 100
Coverage and confidence
Most core metrics are available at city level.
Cost signals
- Median gross rent$2,284
- Median home value$493,100
- Median monthly housing costs$2,212
- Rent as % of household income36.9%
- Rent growth (YoY)-3.8%
- Median household income$132,877
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 Orting, WA expensive to live in?
Orting, WA has a cost-of-living risk score of 78, 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 Orting where the public dataset supports it.
What cost data is used for Orting?
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.